About the northern Thracians' descendants on http://www.wonderful-romania.com/
About the movie: http://thracians.info/
Europe's ancient history should be re-written! Long before Rome came into existence and before Greece flourished, the Thracian stirpes have populated vast areas of the European continent and they left their mark on its whole history.
We invite you on a journey to Europe's antiquity, where a new vision over ancient history will be presented to you. Many of the things you have considered before, as being well established, will be shaken. Little known facts and events will come to redefine history as you know it...The material evidence and historical sources prove that the Thracians had an advanced culture and that they were sophisticated art creators; also, that the Greek world was strongly influenced by the Thracian one, the Greeks borrowing traditions and deities from the Thracians.
Concurrently, the excursion into the ancient Thracian-Geto-Dacian world will bring to you a close-up of the amazing gold and silver ancient treasures and the remarkable personalities of certain Thracian heroes that have remained deeply carved into humanity's memory.
Last but not least, you will discover that Thracian-Geto-Dacians have even reached as far as the rule of the Roman Empire themselves, a fact that was clearly mentioned and beyond any doubt by the Roman ancient historic sources themselves...
May this documentary's viewing be a useful one to you!
DANIEL ROXIN te invită pe site-ul http://www.cunoastelumea.ro Știință, mistere, istorie, dezvăluiri...

published:02 Mar 2014

views:255304

The EGYPTIAN MUSEUM, CAIRO: (Fourth Part)
The Museum of Egyptian Antiquities, known as the Egyptian Museum, in Cairo, Egypt, has the most extensive collection of ancient Egyptian antiquities in the world. this museum has more than 120,000 pieces.and besides has 27 royal mummies.
There are two main floors of the museum, the ground floor and the first floor. On the ground floor visitors will find an extensive collection of papyrus and different daily objects Also on the ground floor are artifacts from the New Kingdom, the time period between 1550 and 1070 BC. These artifacts are generally larger than items created in earlier centuries. Those items include statues, tables, and coffins. If visitors follow these displays in chronological order they will end up on the first floor, which contains artifacts from the final two dynasties of Ancient Egypt. Some artifacts in this area include items from the tombs of the Pharaohs Tuhtmosis III, Tuhtmosis IV, Amenophis II, Hatshepsut, etc,and also many artifacts taken from the legendary Valley of the Kings.
in this video you can see : Many tutakhamun treasure objects.

published:11 Feb 2013

views:21810

http://www.jaxsprats.com Jaxsprat's Unique Collectibles "If it's unique, we have it"
This is a historical documentary highlighting York, St JohnsUniversity.(United Kingdom) It features the quaint and wonderful antiques shops of York and exclusive interview with antiques shop owner John Oglesby discussing them.
WOW! Over 50 Auctions starting as low as 1 Cent! NAME YOUR PRICE! 65% OFF! FREE SHIPPING! 2% cash back on your purchase! "If it's unique, we have it" Jaxsprat's Unique Collectibles Art, antiques, collectibles & more. Over 4700 budget friendly items. www.jaxsprats.com
Jaxsprat's Unique Collectibles "If it's unique we have it" http://www.jaxsprats.com
http://www.jaxspratsuniquecollectibles.com
http://jaxspratsuniquecollectibles.ecrater.com/
Subscribe to our channel.
Follow us on twitter
https://twitter.com/jaxsprats
Join our facebook fan page
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Jaxsprats-Unique-Collectibles/216111956644
CopyrightDisclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
https://www.facebook.com/ArtAntiquesAddoway
'Like' and Share this fan page. We value your support
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published:22 Mar 2012

views:3822

The Egyptian Museum, Cairo, Egypt. Egypt travel attractions and destinations to reveal with us.
Traveling to Egypt is all about visiting the museums, the Pyramids, the old places, as well as getting the chance to walk through the streets, eat the Egyptian food, enjoy a day by the Nile, and at the same time give yourself the chance to get introduced to the nightlife of this city.
From the most famous Egyptian touristic attractions, the Egyptian Museum is on top of the list, through which you will see the historical Pharaonic pieces. The Egyptian Museum is in Tahrir square, which is considered the middle of the city, Cairo, and thus you will not just enjoy watching the old gems, but will also get the chance to see the old Egypt.
The Egyptian museum is famously called the Museum of Egypt "المتحف المصري" and it carries a good amount of Egyptian ancient antiquities, about 120,000 items; some of them are already on display while others are kept in store rooms.
This is a must see and visit place during the trip to Egypt because there are different stories to hear inside about the Gods and Goddesses of ancient Egyptian civilization. You might even love the stories that you just wish you could visit the place once again and go through the same things millions of times.
The most important thing about the Egyptian museum in Cairo is to never miss the hall of the mummies in order to see the superior quality of the life that the ancient Egyptians used to live and have an evidence for that.
The moment you enter the Egyptian museum, you will feel that you have been taken and transformed to the old age due to the sculptures that are found inside and the different things you will get the chance to see.
A lot of Egyptian artwork and Egyptian artifacts to come across in this place. We recommend that you either get a trustworthy tour guide who could help you with knowing more about the place and getting the chance to reveal all the stories, or else bring yourself a book or an article from the internet that will help you to know as much as possible, but never wander the place just watching; read everything that is written there.
There are audio guides which you could buy from the kiosk in front of the foyer for 20 EGP and which will be very useful as your guide inside.
There's great history behind this place, not just the Egyptian artifacts, but the mummies, the masks, and actually everything about this place shows how the Egyptians were so good when it came to living like real kings and queens.
We recommend that you take your water with you because it is a little bit hot inside and you might find nowhere to bring yourself water inside during the journey. We also recommend that you take something that will tell you more about the artifacts there because some don't have label and you might find yourself standing in front of something you know nothing about.
Egypt history is like no other place in the world, this country of peace carries a lot to tell the world and the Egyptian museum is where the story starts. The grand Egyptian museum will tell you about the 7 thousand years of history that this country carried and that is the reason why it is considered one of the most important museums to visit in the world.
The Egyptian museum working hours are everyday from 9 AM until 7 PM. The Egyptian museum entrance fee differ according to what you are going to see inside; general admission is for 30 EGP for non-Egyptians, the royal mummies room is for 100 EGP, the centennial gallery for 10 EGP, and all these are reduced by half if you are a student.
Cameras are not allowed inside the place and you will be checked for that by the gates, so you will never get the chance to take photos inside and keep the memory of seeing those artifacts with you. You could only take photos from the outside to prove that you have been there and visited this important museum of Egypt.
This place is so famous, you will be able to reach it by taxi, by the metro, or even by the other transportation tools - but we don't recommend any other way than these two.
The Nile is only five minutes walk away from the Egyptian Museum so you could go for a walk there after you get done with your trip in the museum. There are different things to do in Egypt in general and a lot of things to see, so always plan to see as much as your stay allows you to.
When you visit Egypt, you should plan to visit Muhammad Ali Mosque https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwAAVYvQ9F4
You should also visit The National Museum of Egypt https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xT-pJZz6tQ
You should give yourself the chance to go to a tour through the Pharaonic Village https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-37RebZugmc
And even go to Al Moez street https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_akllOFjFyg

Support Us On Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/MysteryHistory
We Are Also On Steemit: https://steemit.com/@mysteryhistory
On the 25th of January 2011, the streets of Cairo were being ravaged by a rioting population, demanding the end of PresidentHosni Mubarak’s 30 year regime.
While the world was distracted by the dramatic scenes of chaos upon the streets above, deep within the ancient, dusty tunnels, a team of archaeologists led by Susanne Bickel of the University of Basel in Switzerland, was quietly making one of the most significant discoveries of the past century.
They had initially found the top of large round stone at the eastern end of the valley of the kings.
The archaeologists suspected that it was just the top of an abandoned shaft. But before they could investigate,, due to Egypt’s political process regarding finds within the valley, they had to cover the stone rim with their own locked iron door, inform the Egyptian authorities, and apply for an official permit to excavate.
A year later, after gaining approval to excavate, Bickel returned with a team of two dozen people, including field director Elina Paulin-Grothe of the University of Basel, Egyptian inspector Ali Reda, and local workmen.
each took turns lying on the ground, head pressed against the shaft wall, one arm through a small hole next to the cap stone snapping photographs.
They left little doubt it was indeed am ancient tomb. On top of the debris rested a dusty black coffin carved from sycamore wood and decorated with large yellow hieroglyphs on its sides and top. Bickel has stated that she has never seen an Egyptian coffin in such a good condition before,”
The dating of fragments of pottery made from Nile silt and pieces of plaster, commonly used to seal tomb entrances in ancient times, together with the age of other nearby sites, have indicated that the tomb could be more than 3 thousand years old.
The hieroglyphs describe the tomb’s occupant as being named Nehemes-Bastet, Egyptologists currently believe she was a lady of the upper class and of Amun.
People have been claiming there was nothing new left to find in the Valley of the Kings for almost as long as they have been digging there. The Venetian antiquarian Giovanni Belzoni believed he had emptied the last of the valley’s tombs during his 1817 expedition. While Theodore Davis, who excavated there a century later, came to a similar conclusion right before Tutankhamun’s burial chamber was found.
Fortunately, there is a growing number of people who are beginning to suspect that there is a wealth of discoveries still left to be made in the valley of the kings, the Nile delta, and Egypt as a whole, and thanks to discoveries such as these, interest in these existing mysteries grows by the day.
“It’s interesting to see that in this period, even a wealthy girl was buried with quite simple things,” Bickel says, comparing Nehemes-Bastet’s coffin and stele with the elaborate pottery, furniture, and food found in earlier tombs.
“Her wooden coffin was certainly quite expensive,” she says, but nonetheless, it lacked the elaborate inner coffins found in similar burials.
Is this the burial chamber of an extremely ancient queen? After reinforcing the coffin and securing the mummy, Bickel’s team have transported it across the Nile to Luxor, where a full investigation is currently being undertaken into the true identity of the mystery female.
With substantial insight into the controversial finds within ancient Egypt, we personally suspect that often the tombs which appear the most crudely designed, containing wooden sarcophagus are generally found to be the most ancient, furthermore, their hieroglyphic writings were often far more exquisite in nature.
Could this be the discovery of an original burial? And the crude hieroglyphic claim of the occupant’s identity a fake?
Hiding the deltas true antiquity?
A secret many fringe scientists have begun to believe is being protected by Egyptian antiquities.
Many have come to suspect the Egyptians merely copied the original builders of the pyramids, after taking occupation of their structures many years later.
Supportive evidence for these claims come in many forms: erosion upon the pyramids and especially the sphinx, including over 100 underground chambers, we are currently researching, discovered under giza In 1995, by a team led by Kent Weeks, which also show strong evidence of several flash flooding events involving sea water throughout their long existence. The lack of any written detail pertaining to the construction of either monument in any hieroglyphs found in ancient Egypt. And so on,
We will continue to do research on Nehemes-Bastet, and will endeavour to keep you all informed regarding any notable findings.
http://archive.archaeology.org/1207/features/valley_of_the_kings_egypt_chantress_coffin.html

Definition

The definition of the term is not always precise, and institutional definitions such as museum "Departments of Antiquities" often cover later periods, but in normal usage Gothic objects, for example, would not now be described as antiquities, though in 1700 they might well have been, as the cut-off date for antiquities has tended to retreat since the word was first found in English in 1513. Non-artistic artifacts are now less likely to be called antiquities than in earlier periods. Francis Bacon wrote in 1605: "Antiquities are history defaced, or some remnants of history which have casually escaped the shipwreck of time".

Museum

A museum (/mjuˈziːəm/; myoo-zee-um) is an institution that cares for (conserves) a collection of artifacts and other objects of artistic, cultural, historical, or scientific importance and makes them available for public viewing through exhibits that may be permanent or temporary. Most large museums are located in major cities throughout the world and more local ones exist in smaller cities, towns and even the countryside. Museums have varying aims, ranging from serving researchers and specialists to serving the general public. The goal of serving researchers is increasingly shifting to serving the general public.

The Egyptian

The Egyptian (Sinuhe egyptiläinen, Sinuhe the Egyptian) is a historical novel by Mika Waltari. It was first published in Finnish in 1945, and in an abridged English translation by Naomi Walford in 1949, apparently from Swedish rather than Finnish. So far, it is the only Finnish novel to be adapted into a Hollywood film, which it was, in 1954.

The Egyptian is the first and the most successful, of Waltari's great historical novels. It is set in Ancient Egypt, mostly during the reign of Pharaoh Akhenaten of the 18th Dynasty, whom some have claimed to be the first monotheistic ruler in the world.

The protagonist of the novel is the fictional character Sinuhe, the royal physician, who tells the story in exile after Akhenaten's fall and death. Apart from incidents in Egypt, the novel charts Sinuhe's travels in then Egyptian-dominated Syria (Levant), in Mitanni, Babylon, Minoan Crete, and among the Hittites.

The main character of the novel is named after a character in an ancient Egyptian text commonly known as The Story of Sinuhe. The original story dates to a time long before that of Akhenaten: texts are known from as early as the 12th dynasty.

The Thracians, a Hidden History - HD 2013

About the northern Thracians' descendants on http://www.wonderful-romania.com/
About the movie: http://thracians.info/
Europe's ancient history should be re-written! Long before Rome came into existence and before Greece flourished, the Thracian stirpes have populated vast areas of the European continent and they left their mark on its whole history.
We invite you on a journey to Europe's antiquity, where a new vision over ancient history will be presented to you. Many of the things you have considered before, as being well established, will be shaken. Little known facts and events will come to redefine history as you know it...The material evidence and historical sources prove that the Thracians had an advanced culture and that they were sophisticated art creators; also, that the Greek world was strongly influenced by the Thracian one, the Greeks borrowing traditions and deities from the Thracians.
Concurrently, the excursion into the ancient Thracian-Geto-Dacian world will bring to you a close-up of the amazing gold and silver ancient treasures and the remarkable personalities of certain Thracian heroes that have remained deeply carved into humanity's memory.
Last but not least, you will discover that Thracian-Geto-Dacians have even reached as far as the rule of the Roman Empire themselves, a fact that was clearly mentioned and beyond any doubt by the Roman ancient historic sources themselves...
May this documentary's viewing be a useful one to you!
DANIEL ROXIN te invită pe site-ul http://www.cunoastelumea.ro Știință, mistere, istorie, dezvăluiri...

9:58

EGYPT 314 - EGYPTIAN MUSEUM CAIRO IV - (by Egyptahotep)

EGYPT 314 - EGYPTIAN MUSEUM CAIRO IV - (by Egyptahotep)

EGYPT 314 - EGYPTIAN MUSEUM CAIRO IV - (by Egyptahotep)

The EGYPTIAN MUSEUM, CAIRO: (Fourth Part)
The Museum of Egyptian Antiquities, known as the Egyptian Museum, in Cairo, Egypt, has the most extensive collection of ancient Egyptian antiquities in the world. this museum has more than 120,000 pieces.and besides has 27 royal mummies.
There are two main floors of the museum, the ground floor and the first floor. On the ground floor visitors will find an extensive collection of papyrus and different daily objects Also on the ground floor are artifacts from the New Kingdom, the time period between 1550 and 1070 BC. These artifacts are generally larger than items created in earlier centuries. Those items include statues, tables, and coffins. If visitors follow these displays in chronological order they will end up on the first floor, which contains artifacts from the final two dynasties of Ancient Egypt. Some artifacts in this area include items from the tombs of the Pharaohs Tuhtmosis III, Tuhtmosis IV, Amenophis II, Hatshepsut, etc,and also many artifacts taken from the legendary Valley of the Kings.
in this video you can see : Many tutakhamun treasure objects.

3:35

Antiquities - The Antique Shops Of York

Antiquities - The Antique Shops Of York

Antiquities - The Antique Shops Of York

http://www.jaxsprats.com Jaxsprat's Unique Collectibles "If it's unique, we have it"
This is a historical documentary highlighting York, St JohnsUniversity.(United Kingdom) It features the quaint and wonderful antiques shops of York and exclusive interview with antiques shop owner John Oglesby discussing them.
WOW! Over 50 Auctions starting as low as 1 Cent! NAME YOUR PRICE! 65% OFF! FREE SHIPPING! 2% cash back on your purchase! "If it's unique, we have it" Jaxsprat's Unique Collectibles Art, antiques, collectibles & more. Over 4700 budget friendly items. www.jaxsprats.com
Jaxsprat's Unique Collectibles "If it's unique we have it" http://www.jaxsprats.com
http://www.jaxspratsuniquecollectibles.com
http://jaxspratsuniquecollectibles.ecrater.com/
Subscribe to our channel.
Follow us on twitter
https://twitter.com/jaxsprats
Join our facebook fan page
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Jaxsprats-Unique-Collectibles/216111956644
CopyrightDisclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
https://www.facebook.com/ArtAntiquesAddoway
'Like' and Share this fan page. We value your support
Join the great online shopping social network of Addoway

The Egyptian Museum, Cairo, Egypt. Egypt travel attractions and destinations to reveal with us.
Traveling to Egypt is all about visiting the museums, the Pyramids, the old places, as well as getting the chance to walk through the streets, eat the Egyptian food, enjoy a day by the Nile, and at the same time give yourself the chance to get introduced to the nightlife of this city.
From the most famous Egyptian touristic attractions, the Egyptian Museum is on top of the list, through which you will see the historical Pharaonic pieces. The Egyptian Museum is in Tahrir square, which is considered the middle of the city, Cairo, and thus you will not just enjoy watching the old gems, but will also get the chance to see the old Egypt.
The Egyptian museum is famously called the Museum of Egypt "المتحف المصري" and it carries a good amount of Egyptian ancient antiquities, about 120,000 items; some of them are already on display while others are kept in store rooms.
This is a must see and visit place during the trip to Egypt because there are different stories to hear inside about the Gods and Goddesses of ancient Egyptian civilization. You might even love the stories that you just wish you could visit the place once again and go through the same things millions of times.
The most important thing about the Egyptian museum in Cairo is to never miss the hall of the mummies in order to see the superior quality of the life that the ancient Egyptians used to live and have an evidence for that.
The moment you enter the Egyptian museum, you will feel that you have been taken and transformed to the old age due to the sculptures that are found inside and the different things you will get the chance to see.
A lot of Egyptian artwork and Egyptian artifacts to come across in this place. We recommend that you either get a trustworthy tour guide who could help you with knowing more about the place and getting the chance to reveal all the stories, or else bring yourself a book or an article from the internet that will help you to know as much as possible, but never wander the place just watching; read everything that is written there.
There are audio guides which you could buy from the kiosk in front of the foyer for 20 EGP and which will be very useful as your guide inside.
There's great history behind this place, not just the Egyptian artifacts, but the mummies, the masks, and actually everything about this place shows how the Egyptians were so good when it came to living like real kings and queens.
We recommend that you take your water with you because it is a little bit hot inside and you might find nowhere to bring yourself water inside during the journey. We also recommend that you take something that will tell you more about the artifacts there because some don't have label and you might find yourself standing in front of something you know nothing about.
Egypt history is like no other place in the world, this country of peace carries a lot to tell the world and the Egyptian museum is where the story starts. The grand Egyptian museum will tell you about the 7 thousand years of history that this country carried and that is the reason why it is considered one of the most important museums to visit in the world.
The Egyptian museum working hours are everyday from 9 AM until 7 PM. The Egyptian museum entrance fee differ according to what you are going to see inside; general admission is for 30 EGP for non-Egyptians, the royal mummies room is for 100 EGP, the centennial gallery for 10 EGP, and all these are reduced by half if you are a student.
Cameras are not allowed inside the place and you will be checked for that by the gates, so you will never get the chance to take photos inside and keep the memory of seeing those artifacts with you. You could only take photos from the outside to prove that you have been there and visited this important museum of Egypt.
This place is so famous, you will be able to reach it by taxi, by the metro, or even by the other transportation tools - but we don't recommend any other way than these two.
The Nile is only five minutes walk away from the Egyptian Museum so you could go for a walk there after you get done with your trip in the museum. There are different things to do in Egypt in general and a lot of things to see, so always plan to see as much as your stay allows you to.
When you visit Egypt, you should plan to visit Muhammad Ali Mosque https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwAAVYvQ9F4
You should also visit The National Museum of Egypt https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xT-pJZz6tQ
You should give yourself the chance to go to a tour through the Pharaonic Village https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-37RebZugmc
And even go to Al Moez street https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_akllOFjFyg

Tomb Of 800,000 Year Old Queen Found In Egypt?

Support Us On Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/MysteryHistory
We Are Also On Steemit: https://steemit.com/@mysteryhistory
On the 25th of January 2011, the streets of Cairo were being ravaged by a rioting population, demanding the end of PresidentHosni Mubarak’s 30 year regime.
While the world was distracted by the dramatic scenes of chaos upon the streets above, deep within the ancient, dusty tunnels, a team of archaeologists led by Susanne Bickel of the University of Basel in Switzerland, was quietly making one of the most significant discoveries of the past century.
They had initially found the top of large round stone at the eastern end of the valley of the kings.
The archaeologists suspected that it was just the top of an abandoned shaft. But before they could investigate,, due to Egypt’s political process regarding finds within the valley, they had to cover the stone rim with their own locked iron door, inform the Egyptian authorities, and apply for an official permit to excavate.
A year later, after gaining approval to excavate, Bickel returned with a team of two dozen people, including field director Elina Paulin-Grothe of the University of Basel, Egyptian inspector Ali Reda, and local workmen.
each took turns lying on the ground, head pressed against the shaft wall, one arm through a small hole next to the cap stone snapping photographs.
They left little doubt it was indeed am ancient tomb. On top of the debris rested a dusty black coffin carved from sycamore wood and decorated with large yellow hieroglyphs on its sides and top. Bickel has stated that she has never seen an Egyptian coffin in such a good condition before,”
The dating of fragments of pottery made from Nile silt and pieces of plaster, commonly used to seal tomb entrances in ancient times, together with the age of other nearby sites, have indicated that the tomb could be more than 3 thousand years old.
The hieroglyphs describe the tomb’s occupant as being named Nehemes-Bastet, Egyptologists currently believe she was a lady of the upper class and of Amun.
People have been claiming there was nothing new left to find in the Valley of the Kings for almost as long as they have been digging there. The Venetian antiquarian Giovanni Belzoni believed he had emptied the last of the valley’s tombs during his 1817 expedition. While Theodore Davis, who excavated there a century later, came to a similar conclusion right before Tutankhamun’s burial chamber was found.
Fortunately, there is a growing number of people who are beginning to suspect that there is a wealth of discoveries still left to be made in the valley of the kings, the Nile delta, and Egypt as a whole, and thanks to discoveries such as these, interest in these existing mysteries grows by the day.
“It’s interesting to see that in this period, even a wealthy girl was buried with quite simple things,” Bickel says, comparing Nehemes-Bastet’s coffin and stele with the elaborate pottery, furniture, and food found in earlier tombs.
“Her wooden coffin was certainly quite expensive,” she says, but nonetheless, it lacked the elaborate inner coffins found in similar burials.
Is this the burial chamber of an extremely ancient queen? After reinforcing the coffin and securing the mummy, Bickel’s team have transported it across the Nile to Luxor, where a full investigation is currently being undertaken into the true identity of the mystery female.
With substantial insight into the controversial finds within ancient Egypt, we personally suspect that often the tombs which appear the most crudely designed, containing wooden sarcophagus are generally found to be the most ancient, furthermore, their hieroglyphic writings were often far more exquisite in nature.
Could this be the discovery of an original burial? And the crude hieroglyphic claim of the occupant’s identity a fake?
Hiding the deltas true antiquity?
A secret many fringe scientists have begun to believe is being protected by Egyptian antiquities.
Many have come to suspect the Egyptians merely copied the original builders of the pyramids, after taking occupation of their structures many years later.
Supportive evidence for these claims come in many forms: erosion upon the pyramids and especially the sphinx, including over 100 underground chambers, we are currently researching, discovered under giza In 1995, by a team led by Kent Weeks, which also show strong evidence of several flash flooding events involving sea water throughout their long existence. The lack of any written detail pertaining to the construction of either monument in any hieroglyphs found in ancient Egypt. And so on,
We will continue to do research on Nehemes-Bastet, and will endeavour to keep you all informed regarding any notable findings.
http://archive.archaeology.org/1207/features/valley_of_the_kings_egypt_chantress_coffin.html

3:20

New Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Remains Found in Egypt 2017 - Evidence of Lost High Technology

New Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Remains Found in Egypt 2017 - Evidence of Lost High Technology

New Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Remains Found in Egypt 2017 - Evidence of Lost High Technology

2017 - New PyramidFound in Egypt! The remains of a pyramid built some "3,700" years ago have been discovered in Egypt, the antiquities ministry says.
An interior corridor and a block engraved with 10 hieroglyphic lines were among the finds at the Dahshur royal necropolis, south of Cairo.
The ministry said they were in very good condition and that excavation work was continuing to try to reveal more and establish the size of the pyramid.
It is believed to have been built during the 13th pharaonic dynasty. According to BBCNews.
The evidence of lost ancient high technology through ancient Egypt is astounding. The true history of ancient human civilization is far older and more advanced than we were ever taught in school.
When analyzing the true age of the Great Sphinx of Egypt, evidence of water erosion concludes a much higher age of at least 7,000 years - significantly higher than the 4,500 year narrative told by mainstream historians and archaeologists.

2:42

Antiquity Blue Whisky

Antiquity Blue Whisky

Antiquity Blue Whisky

http://www.wine-pricelist.com A blog about liquor price !!
Most expensive drinks in United Kingdom one should try this!! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1my3r2vks14
VIRU Beer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X4DgQeFXbIQ
Royal StagWhisky price - Cost - Review - Rate - RatingBlack DogScotch whisky https://youtu.be/evM1plOotWs
Best Top 10 Beers in India https://youtube.com/watch?v=VIgVY6ohOKo
Best scotch whiskies one should taste https://youtube.com/watch?v=XVCXtrqPPiU
PopularIrish whiskies https://youtube.com/watch?v=I3c732hQrM4
Top 10 Best vodkas in India https://youtube.com/watch?v=om83nESp5Ew
For more details about liquors visit http://wine-pricelist.com

9:51

King Tut in Cairo Museum of Egyptian Antiquities

King Tut in Cairo Museum of Egyptian Antiquities

King Tut in Cairo Museum of Egyptian Antiquities

Photo sideshow of the King Tut exhibit to include gold funeral mask and lots of treasures.

SUBSCRIBE: http://www.youtube.com/c/VicStefanu - Let's go to the world famous National Museum of Denmark (Nationalmuseet) in Copenhagen which is Denmark’s largest museum of cultural history. The museum covers 14,000 years of Danish history, from the reindeer-hunters of the Ice Age, Vikings, and works of religious art from the Middle Ages, when the church was highly significant in Danish life. Danish coins from Viking times to the present and coins from ancient Rome and Greece, as well as examples of the coinage and currencies of other cultures, are exhibited also.
In this particular video we are going to concentrate on the thousands of Greek antiquities (some of them dating back to 2,700BC), which were removed from Greece under a variety of suspicious circumstances.
Vic Stefanu, vstefanu@yahoo.com.
To subscribe to this channel:
https://www.youtube.com/c/VicStefanu
To subscribe to my other channel featuring 60 second clips from around the world:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDLaeswPmMKk-she6ixOZ7w
To send me an email: vstefanu@yahoo.com
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My Google+ channel:
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7 decades into Indian democracy, a royal family thrives

(16 Sep 2017) LEADIN
When India gained freedom from British colonial rule in 1947, more than 500 princely states — the semi-sovereign principalities ruled by royal clans — opted to join the democratic republic.
Since then some of India's former Royals have reinvented themselves to remain connected to the people they once ruled.
Descendants of what was once the powerful Marwar-Rathore dynasty in Jodhpur continue to thrive , having successfully turned their ancestral properties into modern business enterprises.
STORYLINE
In the summer of 1944, hundreds of royals gathered for the opening of Umaid Bhawan Palace, a magnificent sandstone edifice that dominates the skyline in India's northwestern city of Jodhpur. It was the last of its kind.
Three years later, India was free from British colonial rule, and more than 500 princely states - the semi-sovereign principalities ruled by royal clans - faced an uncertain future.
Most have faded into obscurity, but the family that built this palace continues to thrive - in part by converting a section of it into a hotel.
India's royals may be long gone but the imposing yellow sand stone palace in Jodhpur remains home to the erstwhile MaharajaGaj Singh, the head of the Rahore family of Marwar.
An immaculately preserved wooden lift with a golden panel bordering its ceilings, fitted with an old sofa and an antique fan opens into the elaborate central dome of the palace.
At the entrance is the coat of arms of the Rathore kings who founded Jodhpur city.
Gaj Singh, the grandson of Maharaja Umaid Singh and the current owner of Umaid Bhawan Palace, inherited the property in 1952 at the age of 4 after his father Hanwant Singh died in a plane crash.
He also inherited the ancestral fort of Mehrangarh.
Gaj Singh's daughter Shivranjani Rajye, manages the family's heritage hotels and trusts.
Rajye says her father "very much believes he is the king and it's because he leads."
"I have seen the way my parents have worked and how hard they have worked – and that for me is royalty," she says.
Inside the palace which is part home and part hotel, history and heritage has a place on every wall.
There is also a family museum with exhibits tracing the history of the Rathore clan and the rich legacy of Jodhpur's royal descendants.
Portraits of Gaj Singh and his wife and framed pictures of their two children - Shivranjani Rajye and Shivraj Singh – join those of visiting royals like Britain's Prince Charles.
FollowingIndia's independence from imperial rule in 1947, most princely states signed up to be part of the new democratic republic.
The Maharajas initially retained their titles and a degree of autonomy but lost it all, including royal privileges and most of their wealth, after a constitutional amendment in 1971.
Stripped of their annual allowances, the former royals had to find a way to survive in a parliamentary democracy that treated them as commoners.
Many royal families descended into chaos.
Some held onto property, only to lose it amid internal bickering over rival claims.
"The properties that they inherited were in a true sense white elephants," says Karni SinghJasol, Director of Mehrangarh fort and museum.
"The royal families were high on assets, but low on liquidity. They didn't have large bank balances to turn their family properties into something grand or sustain it for the future," he says.
The Singhs of Jodhpur not only maintained their holdings, but managed over decades to grow.
When royal allowances were cancelled in 1971, the young Singh patriarch acted quickly.
The family opened part of its palace as a hotel in 1978, and turned the Mehrangarh fort into a museum, investing profits into preserving Jodhpur's royal antiquities.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/41dea55113642b41bf0c4f963ef88682
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

The Thracians, a Hidden History - HD 2013

About the northern Thracians' descendants on http://www.wonderful-romania.com/
About the movie: http://thracians.info/
Europe's ancient history should be re-written! Long before Rome came into existence and before Greece flourished, the Thracian stirpes have populated vast areas of the European continent and they left their mark on its whole history.
We invite you on a journey to Europe's antiquity, where a new vision over ancient history will be presented to you. Many of the things you have considered before, as being well established, will be shaken. Little known facts and events will come to redefine history as you know it...The material evidence and historical sources prove that the Thracians had an advanced culture and that they were sophisticated art creators; also, that the Gree...

published: 02 Mar 2014

EGYPT 314 - EGYPTIAN MUSEUM CAIRO IV - (by Egyptahotep)

The EGYPTIAN MUSEUM, CAIRO: (Fourth Part)
The Museum of Egyptian Antiquities, known as the Egyptian Museum, in Cairo, Egypt, has the most extensive collection of ancient Egyptian antiquities in the world. this museum has more than 120,000 pieces.and besides has 27 royal mummies.
There are two main floors of the museum, the ground floor and the first floor. On the ground floor visitors will find an extensive collection of papyrus and different daily objects Also on the ground floor are artifacts from the New Kingdom, the time period between 1550 and 1070 BC. These artifacts are generally larger than items created in earlier centuries. Those items include statues, tables, and coffins. If visitors follow these displays in chronological order they will end up on the first floor, which contains...

The Egyptian Museum, Cairo, Egypt. Egypt travel attractions and destinations to reveal with us.
Traveling to Egypt is all about visiting the museums, the Pyramids, the old places, as well as getting the chance to walk through the streets, eat the Egyptian food, enjoy a day by the Nile, and at the same time give yourself the chance to get introduced to the nightlife of this city.
From the most famous Egyptian touristic attractions, the Egyptian Museum is on top of the list, through which you will see the historical Pharaonic pieces. The Egyptian Museum is in Tahrir square, which is considered the middle of the city, Cairo, and thus you will not just enjoy watching the old gems, but will also get the chance to see the old Egypt.
The Egyptian museum is famously called the Museum of Egypt ...

Tomb Of 800,000 Year Old Queen Found In Egypt?

Support Us On Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/MysteryHistory
We Are Also On Steemit: https://steemit.com/@mysteryhistory
On the 25th of January 2011, the streets of Cairo were being ravaged by a rioting population, demanding the end of PresidentHosni Mubarak’s 30 year regime.
While the world was distracted by the dramatic scenes of chaos upon the streets above, deep within the ancient, dusty tunnels, a team of archaeologists led by Susanne Bickel of the University of Basel in Switzerland, was quietly making one of the most significant discoveries of the past century.
They had initially found the top of large round stone at the eastern end of the valley of the kings.
The archaeologists suspected that it was just the top of an abandoned shaft. But before they could investigate,, d...

published: 26 May 2017

New Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Remains Found in Egypt 2017 - Evidence of Lost High Technology

2017 - New PyramidFound in Egypt! The remains of a pyramid built some "3,700" years ago have been discovered in Egypt, the antiquities ministry says.
An interior corridor and a block engraved with 10 hieroglyphic lines were among the finds at the Dahshur royal necropolis, south of Cairo.
The ministry said they were in very good condition and that excavation work was continuing to try to reveal more and establish the size of the pyramid.
It is believed to have been built during the 13th pharaonic dynasty. According to BBCNews.
The evidence of lost ancient high technology through ancient Egypt is astounding. The true history of ancient human civilization is far older and more advanced than we were ever taught in school.
When analyzing the true age of the Great Sphinx of Egypt, evidence of...

published: 03 Apr 2017

Antiquity Blue Whisky

http://www.wine-pricelist.com A blog about liquor price !!
Most expensive drinks in United Kingdom one should try this!! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1my3r2vks14
VIRU Beer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X4DgQeFXbIQ
Royal StagWhisky price - Cost - Review - Rate - RatingBlack DogScotch whisky https://youtu.be/evM1plOotWs
Best Top 10 Beers in India https://youtube.com/watch?v=VIgVY6ohOKo
Best scotch whiskies one should taste https://youtube.com/watch?v=XVCXtrqPPiU
PopularIrish whiskies https://youtube.com/watch?v=I3c732hQrM4
Top 10 Best vodkas in India https://youtube.com/watch?v=om83nESp5Ew
For more details about liquors visit http://wine-pricelist.com

published: 20 May 2017

King Tut in Cairo Museum of Egyptian Antiquities

Photo sideshow of the King Tut exhibit to include gold funeral mask and lots of treasures.

SUBSCRIBE: http://www.youtube.com/c/VicStefanu - Let's go to the world famous National Museum of Denmark (Nationalmuseet) in Copenhagen which is Denmark’s largest museum of cultural history. The museum covers 14,000 years of Danish history, from the reindeer-hunters of the Ice Age, Vikings, and works of religious art from the Middle Ages, when the church was highly significant in Danish life. Danish coins from Viking times to the present and coins from ancient Rome and Greece, as well as examples of the coinage and currencies of other cultures, are exhibited also.
In this particular video we are going to concentrate on the thousands of Greek antiquities (some of them dating back to 2,700BC), which were removed from Greece under a variety of suspicious circumstances.
Vic Stefanu, vstefan...

7 decades into Indian democracy, a royal family thrives

(16 Sep 2017) LEADIN
When India gained freedom from British colonial rule in 1947, more than 500 princely states — the semi-sovereign principalities ruled by royal clans — opted to join the democratic republic.
Since then some of India's former Royals have reinvented themselves to remain connected to the people they once ruled.
Descendants of what was once the powerful Marwar-Rathore dynasty in Jodhpur continue to thrive , having successfully turned their ancestral properties into modern business enterprises.
STORYLINE
In the summer of 1944, hundreds of royals gathered for the opening of Umaid Bhawan Palace, a magnificent sandstone edifice that dominates the skyline in India's northwestern city of Jodhpur. It was the last of its kind.
Three years later, India was free from British...

The Thracians, a Hidden History - HD 2013

About the northern Thracians' descendants on http://www.wonderful-romania.com/
About the movie: http://thracians.info/
Europe's ancient history should be re-wri...

About the northern Thracians' descendants on http://www.wonderful-romania.com/
About the movie: http://thracians.info/
Europe's ancient history should be re-written! Long before Rome came into existence and before Greece flourished, the Thracian stirpes have populated vast areas of the European continent and they left their mark on its whole history.
We invite you on a journey to Europe's antiquity, where a new vision over ancient history will be presented to you. Many of the things you have considered before, as being well established, will be shaken. Little known facts and events will come to redefine history as you know it...The material evidence and historical sources prove that the Thracians had an advanced culture and that they were sophisticated art creators; also, that the Greek world was strongly influenced by the Thracian one, the Greeks borrowing traditions and deities from the Thracians.
Concurrently, the excursion into the ancient Thracian-Geto-Dacian world will bring to you a close-up of the amazing gold and silver ancient treasures and the remarkable personalities of certain Thracian heroes that have remained deeply carved into humanity's memory.
Last but not least, you will discover that Thracian-Geto-Dacians have even reached as far as the rule of the Roman Empire themselves, a fact that was clearly mentioned and beyond any doubt by the Roman ancient historic sources themselves...
May this documentary's viewing be a useful one to you!
DANIEL ROXIN te invită pe site-ul http://www.cunoastelumea.ro Știință, mistere, istorie, dezvăluiri...

About the northern Thracians' descendants on http://www.wonderful-romania.com/
About the movie: http://thracians.info/
Europe's ancient history should be re-written! Long before Rome came into existence and before Greece flourished, the Thracian stirpes have populated vast areas of the European continent and they left their mark on its whole history.
We invite you on a journey to Europe's antiquity, where a new vision over ancient history will be presented to you. Many of the things you have considered before, as being well established, will be shaken. Little known facts and events will come to redefine history as you know it...The material evidence and historical sources prove that the Thracians had an advanced culture and that they were sophisticated art creators; also, that the Greek world was strongly influenced by the Thracian one, the Greeks borrowing traditions and deities from the Thracians.
Concurrently, the excursion into the ancient Thracian-Geto-Dacian world will bring to you a close-up of the amazing gold and silver ancient treasures and the remarkable personalities of certain Thracian heroes that have remained deeply carved into humanity's memory.
Last but not least, you will discover that Thracian-Geto-Dacians have even reached as far as the rule of the Roman Empire themselves, a fact that was clearly mentioned and beyond any doubt by the Roman ancient historic sources themselves...
May this documentary's viewing be a useful one to you!
DANIEL ROXIN te invită pe site-ul http://www.cunoastelumea.ro Știință, mistere, istorie, dezvăluiri...

The EGYPTIAN MUSEUM, CAIRO: (Fourth Part)
The Museum of Egyptian Antiquities, known as the Egyptian Museum, in Cairo, Egypt, has the most extensive collection of ancient Egyptian antiquities in the world. this museum has more than 120,000 pieces.and besides has 27 royal mummies.
There are two main floors of the museum, the ground floor and the first floor. On the ground floor visitors will find an extensive collection of papyrus and different daily objects Also on the ground floor are artifacts from the New Kingdom, the time period between 1550 and 1070 BC. These artifacts are generally larger than items created in earlier centuries. Those items include statues, tables, and coffins. If visitors follow these displays in chronological order they will end up on the first floor, which contains artifacts from the final two dynasties of Ancient Egypt. Some artifacts in this area include items from the tombs of the Pharaohs Tuhtmosis III, Tuhtmosis IV, Amenophis II, Hatshepsut, etc,and also many artifacts taken from the legendary Valley of the Kings.
in this video you can see : Many tutakhamun treasure objects.

The EGYPTIAN MUSEUM, CAIRO: (Fourth Part)
The Museum of Egyptian Antiquities, known as the Egyptian Museum, in Cairo, Egypt, has the most extensive collection of ancient Egyptian antiquities in the world. this museum has more than 120,000 pieces.and besides has 27 royal mummies.
There are two main floors of the museum, the ground floor and the first floor. On the ground floor visitors will find an extensive collection of papyrus and different daily objects Also on the ground floor are artifacts from the New Kingdom, the time period between 1550 and 1070 BC. These artifacts are generally larger than items created in earlier centuries. Those items include statues, tables, and coffins. If visitors follow these displays in chronological order they will end up on the first floor, which contains artifacts from the final two dynasties of Ancient Egypt. Some artifacts in this area include items from the tombs of the Pharaohs Tuhtmosis III, Tuhtmosis IV, Amenophis II, Hatshepsut, etc,and also many artifacts taken from the legendary Valley of the Kings.
in this video you can see : Many tutakhamun treasure objects.

The Egyptian Museum, Cairo, Egypt. Egypt travel attractions and destinations to reveal with us.
Traveling to Egypt is all about visiting the museums, the Pyramids, the old places, as well as getting the chance to walk through the streets, eat the Egyptian food, enjoy a day by the Nile, and at the same time give yourself the chance to get introduced to the nightlife of this city.
From the most famous Egyptian touristic attractions, the Egyptian Museum is on top of the list, through which you will see the historical Pharaonic pieces. The Egyptian Museum is in Tahrir square, which is considered the middle of the city, Cairo, and thus you will not just enjoy watching the old gems, but will also get the chance to see the old Egypt.
The Egyptian museum is famously called the Museum of Egypt "المتحف المصري" and it carries a good amount of Egyptian ancient antiquities, about 120,000 items; some of them are already on display while others are kept in store rooms.
This is a must see and visit place during the trip to Egypt because there are different stories to hear inside about the Gods and Goddesses of ancient Egyptian civilization. You might even love the stories that you just wish you could visit the place once again and go through the same things millions of times.
The most important thing about the Egyptian museum in Cairo is to never miss the hall of the mummies in order to see the superior quality of the life that the ancient Egyptians used to live and have an evidence for that.
The moment you enter the Egyptian museum, you will feel that you have been taken and transformed to the old age due to the sculptures that are found inside and the different things you will get the chance to see.
A lot of Egyptian artwork and Egyptian artifacts to come across in this place. We recommend that you either get a trustworthy tour guide who could help you with knowing more about the place and getting the chance to reveal all the stories, or else bring yourself a book or an article from the internet that will help you to know as much as possible, but never wander the place just watching; read everything that is written there.
There are audio guides which you could buy from the kiosk in front of the foyer for 20 EGP and which will be very useful as your guide inside.
There's great history behind this place, not just the Egyptian artifacts, but the mummies, the masks, and actually everything about this place shows how the Egyptians were so good when it came to living like real kings and queens.
We recommend that you take your water with you because it is a little bit hot inside and you might find nowhere to bring yourself water inside during the journey. We also recommend that you take something that will tell you more about the artifacts there because some don't have label and you might find yourself standing in front of something you know nothing about.
Egypt history is like no other place in the world, this country of peace carries a lot to tell the world and the Egyptian museum is where the story starts. The grand Egyptian museum will tell you about the 7 thousand years of history that this country carried and that is the reason why it is considered one of the most important museums to visit in the world.
The Egyptian museum working hours are everyday from 9 AM until 7 PM. The Egyptian museum entrance fee differ according to what you are going to see inside; general admission is for 30 EGP for non-Egyptians, the royal mummies room is for 100 EGP, the centennial gallery for 10 EGP, and all these are reduced by half if you are a student.
Cameras are not allowed inside the place and you will be checked for that by the gates, so you will never get the chance to take photos inside and keep the memory of seeing those artifacts with you. You could only take photos from the outside to prove that you have been there and visited this important museum of Egypt.
This place is so famous, you will be able to reach it by taxi, by the metro, or even by the other transportation tools - but we don't recommend any other way than these two.
The Nile is only five minutes walk away from the Egyptian Museum so you could go for a walk there after you get done with your trip in the museum. There are different things to do in Egypt in general and a lot of things to see, so always plan to see as much as your stay allows you to.
When you visit Egypt, you should plan to visit Muhammad Ali Mosque https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwAAVYvQ9F4
You should also visit The National Museum of Egypt https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xT-pJZz6tQ
You should give yourself the chance to go to a tour through the Pharaonic Village https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-37RebZugmc
And even go to Al Moez street https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_akllOFjFyg

The Egyptian Museum, Cairo, Egypt. Egypt travel attractions and destinations to reveal with us.
Traveling to Egypt is all about visiting the museums, the Pyramids, the old places, as well as getting the chance to walk through the streets, eat the Egyptian food, enjoy a day by the Nile, and at the same time give yourself the chance to get introduced to the nightlife of this city.
From the most famous Egyptian touristic attractions, the Egyptian Museum is on top of the list, through which you will see the historical Pharaonic pieces. The Egyptian Museum is in Tahrir square, which is considered the middle of the city, Cairo, and thus you will not just enjoy watching the old gems, but will also get the chance to see the old Egypt.
The Egyptian museum is famously called the Museum of Egypt "المتحف المصري" and it carries a good amount of Egyptian ancient antiquities, about 120,000 items; some of them are already on display while others are kept in store rooms.
This is a must see and visit place during the trip to Egypt because there are different stories to hear inside about the Gods and Goddesses of ancient Egyptian civilization. You might even love the stories that you just wish you could visit the place once again and go through the same things millions of times.
The most important thing about the Egyptian museum in Cairo is to never miss the hall of the mummies in order to see the superior quality of the life that the ancient Egyptians used to live and have an evidence for that.
The moment you enter the Egyptian museum, you will feel that you have been taken and transformed to the old age due to the sculptures that are found inside and the different things you will get the chance to see.
A lot of Egyptian artwork and Egyptian artifacts to come across in this place. We recommend that you either get a trustworthy tour guide who could help you with knowing more about the place and getting the chance to reveal all the stories, or else bring yourself a book or an article from the internet that will help you to know as much as possible, but never wander the place just watching; read everything that is written there.
There are audio guides which you could buy from the kiosk in front of the foyer for 20 EGP and which will be very useful as your guide inside.
There's great history behind this place, not just the Egyptian artifacts, but the mummies, the masks, and actually everything about this place shows how the Egyptians were so good when it came to living like real kings and queens.
We recommend that you take your water with you because it is a little bit hot inside and you might find nowhere to bring yourself water inside during the journey. We also recommend that you take something that will tell you more about the artifacts there because some don't have label and you might find yourself standing in front of something you know nothing about.
Egypt history is like no other place in the world, this country of peace carries a lot to tell the world and the Egyptian museum is where the story starts. The grand Egyptian museum will tell you about the 7 thousand years of history that this country carried and that is the reason why it is considered one of the most important museums to visit in the world.
The Egyptian museum working hours are everyday from 9 AM until 7 PM. The Egyptian museum entrance fee differ according to what you are going to see inside; general admission is for 30 EGP for non-Egyptians, the royal mummies room is for 100 EGP, the centennial gallery for 10 EGP, and all these are reduced by half if you are a student.
Cameras are not allowed inside the place and you will be checked for that by the gates, so you will never get the chance to take photos inside and keep the memory of seeing those artifacts with you. You could only take photos from the outside to prove that you have been there and visited this important museum of Egypt.
This place is so famous, you will be able to reach it by taxi, by the metro, or even by the other transportation tools - but we don't recommend any other way than these two.
The Nile is only five minutes walk away from the Egyptian Museum so you could go for a walk there after you get done with your trip in the museum. There are different things to do in Egypt in general and a lot of things to see, so always plan to see as much as your stay allows you to.
When you visit Egypt, you should plan to visit Muhammad Ali Mosque https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwAAVYvQ9F4
You should also visit The National Museum of Egypt https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xT-pJZz6tQ
You should give yourself the chance to go to a tour through the Pharaonic Village https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-37RebZugmc
And even go to Al Moez street https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_akllOFjFyg

Support Us On Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/MysteryHistory
We Are Also On Steemit: https://steemit.com/@mysteryhistory
On the 25th of January 2011, the streets of Cairo were being ravaged by a rioting population, demanding the end of PresidentHosni Mubarak’s 30 year regime.
While the world was distracted by the dramatic scenes of chaos upon the streets above, deep within the ancient, dusty tunnels, a team of archaeologists led by Susanne Bickel of the University of Basel in Switzerland, was quietly making one of the most significant discoveries of the past century.
They had initially found the top of large round stone at the eastern end of the valley of the kings.
The archaeologists suspected that it was just the top of an abandoned shaft. But before they could investigate,, due to Egypt’s political process regarding finds within the valley, they had to cover the stone rim with their own locked iron door, inform the Egyptian authorities, and apply for an official permit to excavate.
A year later, after gaining approval to excavate, Bickel returned with a team of two dozen people, including field director Elina Paulin-Grothe of the University of Basel, Egyptian inspector Ali Reda, and local workmen.
each took turns lying on the ground, head pressed against the shaft wall, one arm through a small hole next to the cap stone snapping photographs.
They left little doubt it was indeed am ancient tomb. On top of the debris rested a dusty black coffin carved from sycamore wood and decorated with large yellow hieroglyphs on its sides and top. Bickel has stated that she has never seen an Egyptian coffin in such a good condition before,”
The dating of fragments of pottery made from Nile silt and pieces of plaster, commonly used to seal tomb entrances in ancient times, together with the age of other nearby sites, have indicated that the tomb could be more than 3 thousand years old.
The hieroglyphs describe the tomb’s occupant as being named Nehemes-Bastet, Egyptologists currently believe she was a lady of the upper class and of Amun.
People have been claiming there was nothing new left to find in the Valley of the Kings for almost as long as they have been digging there. The Venetian antiquarian Giovanni Belzoni believed he had emptied the last of the valley’s tombs during his 1817 expedition. While Theodore Davis, who excavated there a century later, came to a similar conclusion right before Tutankhamun’s burial chamber was found.
Fortunately, there is a growing number of people who are beginning to suspect that there is a wealth of discoveries still left to be made in the valley of the kings, the Nile delta, and Egypt as a whole, and thanks to discoveries such as these, interest in these existing mysteries grows by the day.
“It’s interesting to see that in this period, even a wealthy girl was buried with quite simple things,” Bickel says, comparing Nehemes-Bastet’s coffin and stele with the elaborate pottery, furniture, and food found in earlier tombs.
“Her wooden coffin was certainly quite expensive,” she says, but nonetheless, it lacked the elaborate inner coffins found in similar burials.
Is this the burial chamber of an extremely ancient queen? After reinforcing the coffin and securing the mummy, Bickel’s team have transported it across the Nile to Luxor, where a full investigation is currently being undertaken into the true identity of the mystery female.
With substantial insight into the controversial finds within ancient Egypt, we personally suspect that often the tombs which appear the most crudely designed, containing wooden sarcophagus are generally found to be the most ancient, furthermore, their hieroglyphic writings were often far more exquisite in nature.
Could this be the discovery of an original burial? And the crude hieroglyphic claim of the occupant’s identity a fake?
Hiding the deltas true antiquity?
A secret many fringe scientists have begun to believe is being protected by Egyptian antiquities.
Many have come to suspect the Egyptians merely copied the original builders of the pyramids, after taking occupation of their structures many years later.
Supportive evidence for these claims come in many forms: erosion upon the pyramids and especially the sphinx, including over 100 underground chambers, we are currently researching, discovered under giza In 1995, by a team led by Kent Weeks, which also show strong evidence of several flash flooding events involving sea water throughout their long existence. The lack of any written detail pertaining to the construction of either monument in any hieroglyphs found in ancient Egypt. And so on,
We will continue to do research on Nehemes-Bastet, and will endeavour to keep you all informed regarding any notable findings.
http://archive.archaeology.org/1207/features/valley_of_the_kings_egypt_chantress_coffin.html

Support Us On Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/MysteryHistory
We Are Also On Steemit: https://steemit.com/@mysteryhistory
On the 25th of January 2011, the streets of Cairo were being ravaged by a rioting population, demanding the end of PresidentHosni Mubarak’s 30 year regime.
While the world was distracted by the dramatic scenes of chaos upon the streets above, deep within the ancient, dusty tunnels, a team of archaeologists led by Susanne Bickel of the University of Basel in Switzerland, was quietly making one of the most significant discoveries of the past century.
They had initially found the top of large round stone at the eastern end of the valley of the kings.
The archaeologists suspected that it was just the top of an abandoned shaft. But before they could investigate,, due to Egypt’s political process regarding finds within the valley, they had to cover the stone rim with their own locked iron door, inform the Egyptian authorities, and apply for an official permit to excavate.
A year later, after gaining approval to excavate, Bickel returned with a team of two dozen people, including field director Elina Paulin-Grothe of the University of Basel, Egyptian inspector Ali Reda, and local workmen.
each took turns lying on the ground, head pressed against the shaft wall, one arm through a small hole next to the cap stone snapping photographs.
They left little doubt it was indeed am ancient tomb. On top of the debris rested a dusty black coffin carved from sycamore wood and decorated with large yellow hieroglyphs on its sides and top. Bickel has stated that she has never seen an Egyptian coffin in such a good condition before,”
The dating of fragments of pottery made from Nile silt and pieces of plaster, commonly used to seal tomb entrances in ancient times, together with the age of other nearby sites, have indicated that the tomb could be more than 3 thousand years old.
The hieroglyphs describe the tomb’s occupant as being named Nehemes-Bastet, Egyptologists currently believe she was a lady of the upper class and of Amun.
People have been claiming there was nothing new left to find in the Valley of the Kings for almost as long as they have been digging there. The Venetian antiquarian Giovanni Belzoni believed he had emptied the last of the valley’s tombs during his 1817 expedition. While Theodore Davis, who excavated there a century later, came to a similar conclusion right before Tutankhamun’s burial chamber was found.
Fortunately, there is a growing number of people who are beginning to suspect that there is a wealth of discoveries still left to be made in the valley of the kings, the Nile delta, and Egypt as a whole, and thanks to discoveries such as these, interest in these existing mysteries grows by the day.
“It’s interesting to see that in this period, even a wealthy girl was buried with quite simple things,” Bickel says, comparing Nehemes-Bastet’s coffin and stele with the elaborate pottery, furniture, and food found in earlier tombs.
“Her wooden coffin was certainly quite expensive,” she says, but nonetheless, it lacked the elaborate inner coffins found in similar burials.
Is this the burial chamber of an extremely ancient queen? After reinforcing the coffin and securing the mummy, Bickel’s team have transported it across the Nile to Luxor, where a full investigation is currently being undertaken into the true identity of the mystery female.
With substantial insight into the controversial finds within ancient Egypt, we personally suspect that often the tombs which appear the most crudely designed, containing wooden sarcophagus are generally found to be the most ancient, furthermore, their hieroglyphic writings were often far more exquisite in nature.
Could this be the discovery of an original burial? And the crude hieroglyphic claim of the occupant’s identity a fake?
Hiding the deltas true antiquity?
A secret many fringe scientists have begun to believe is being protected by Egyptian antiquities.
Many have come to suspect the Egyptians merely copied the original builders of the pyramids, after taking occupation of their structures many years later.
Supportive evidence for these claims come in many forms: erosion upon the pyramids and especially the sphinx, including over 100 underground chambers, we are currently researching, discovered under giza In 1995, by a team led by Kent Weeks, which also show strong evidence of several flash flooding events involving sea water throughout their long existence. The lack of any written detail pertaining to the construction of either monument in any hieroglyphs found in ancient Egypt. And so on,
We will continue to do research on Nehemes-Bastet, and will endeavour to keep you all informed regarding any notable findings.
http://archive.archaeology.org/1207/features/valley_of_the_kings_egypt_chantress_coffin.html

published:26 May 2017

views:1732745

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New Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Remains Found in Egypt 2017 - Evidence of Lost High Technology

2017 - New PyramidFound in Egypt! The remains of a pyramid built some "3,700" years ago have been discovered in Egypt, the antiquities ministry says.
An interi...

2017 - New PyramidFound in Egypt! The remains of a pyramid built some "3,700" years ago have been discovered in Egypt, the antiquities ministry says.
An interior corridor and a block engraved with 10 hieroglyphic lines were among the finds at the Dahshur royal necropolis, south of Cairo.
The ministry said they were in very good condition and that excavation work was continuing to try to reveal more and establish the size of the pyramid.
It is believed to have been built during the 13th pharaonic dynasty. According to BBCNews.
The evidence of lost ancient high technology through ancient Egypt is astounding. The true history of ancient human civilization is far older and more advanced than we were ever taught in school.
When analyzing the true age of the Great Sphinx of Egypt, evidence of water erosion concludes a much higher age of at least 7,000 years - significantly higher than the 4,500 year narrative told by mainstream historians and archaeologists.

2017 - New PyramidFound in Egypt! The remains of a pyramid built some "3,700" years ago have been discovered in Egypt, the antiquities ministry says.
An interior corridor and a block engraved with 10 hieroglyphic lines were among the finds at the Dahshur royal necropolis, south of Cairo.
The ministry said they were in very good condition and that excavation work was continuing to try to reveal more and establish the size of the pyramid.
It is believed to have been built during the 13th pharaonic dynasty. According to BBCNews.
The evidence of lost ancient high technology through ancient Egypt is astounding. The true history of ancient human civilization is far older and more advanced than we were ever taught in school.
When analyzing the true age of the Great Sphinx of Egypt, evidence of water erosion concludes a much higher age of at least 7,000 years - significantly higher than the 4,500 year narrative told by mainstream historians and archaeologists.

SUBSCRIBE: http://www.youtube.com/c/VicStefanu - Let's go to the world famous National Museum of Denmark (Nationalmuseet) in Copenhagen which is Denmark’s largest museum of cultural history. The museum covers 14,000 years of Danish history, from the reindeer-hunters of the Ice Age, Vikings, and works of religious art from the Middle Ages, when the church was highly significant in Danish life. Danish coins from Viking times to the present and coins from ancient Rome and Greece, as well as examples of the coinage and currencies of other cultures, are exhibited also.
In this particular video we are going to concentrate on the thousands of Greek antiquities (some of them dating back to 2,700BC), which were removed from Greece under a variety of suspicious circumstances.
Vic Stefanu, vstefanu@yahoo.com.
To subscribe to this channel:
https://www.youtube.com/c/VicStefanu
To subscribe to my other channel featuring 60 second clips from around the world:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDLaeswPmMKk-she6ixOZ7w
To send me an email: vstefanu@yahoo.com
My facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100010586615859
My facebook page for my travel short clips only:
https://www.facebook.com/Vic-Stefanu-World-Travels-and-Adventures-1305825586144396
My Google+ channel:
https://plus.google.com/+VicStefanu

SUBSCRIBE: http://www.youtube.com/c/VicStefanu - Let's go to the world famous National Museum of Denmark (Nationalmuseet) in Copenhagen which is Denmark’s largest museum of cultural history. The museum covers 14,000 years of Danish history, from the reindeer-hunters of the Ice Age, Vikings, and works of religious art from the Middle Ages, when the church was highly significant in Danish life. Danish coins from Viking times to the present and coins from ancient Rome and Greece, as well as examples of the coinage and currencies of other cultures, are exhibited also.
In this particular video we are going to concentrate on the thousands of Greek antiquities (some of them dating back to 2,700BC), which were removed from Greece under a variety of suspicious circumstances.
Vic Stefanu, vstefanu@yahoo.com.
To subscribe to this channel:
https://www.youtube.com/c/VicStefanu
To subscribe to my other channel featuring 60 second clips from around the world:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDLaeswPmMKk-she6ixOZ7w
To send me an email: vstefanu@yahoo.com
My facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100010586615859
My facebook page for my travel short clips only:
https://www.facebook.com/Vic-Stefanu-World-Travels-and-Adventures-1305825586144396
My Google+ channel:
https://plus.google.com/+VicStefanu

(16 Sep 2017) LEADIN
When India gained freedom from British colonial rule in 1947, more than 500 princely states — the semi-sovereign principalities ruled by royal clans — opted to join the democratic republic.
Since then some of India's former Royals have reinvented themselves to remain connected to the people they once ruled.
Descendants of what was once the powerful Marwar-Rathore dynasty in Jodhpur continue to thrive , having successfully turned their ancestral properties into modern business enterprises.
STORYLINE
In the summer of 1944, hundreds of royals gathered for the opening of Umaid Bhawan Palace, a magnificent sandstone edifice that dominates the skyline in India's northwestern city of Jodhpur. It was the last of its kind.
Three years later, India was free from British colonial rule, and more than 500 princely states - the semi-sovereign principalities ruled by royal clans - faced an uncertain future.
Most have faded into obscurity, but the family that built this palace continues to thrive - in part by converting a section of it into a hotel.
India's royals may be long gone but the imposing yellow sand stone palace in Jodhpur remains home to the erstwhile MaharajaGaj Singh, the head of the Rahore family of Marwar.
An immaculately preserved wooden lift with a golden panel bordering its ceilings, fitted with an old sofa and an antique fan opens into the elaborate central dome of the palace.
At the entrance is the coat of arms of the Rathore kings who founded Jodhpur city.
Gaj Singh, the grandson of Maharaja Umaid Singh and the current owner of Umaid Bhawan Palace, inherited the property in 1952 at the age of 4 after his father Hanwant Singh died in a plane crash.
He also inherited the ancestral fort of Mehrangarh.
Gaj Singh's daughter Shivranjani Rajye, manages the family's heritage hotels and trusts.
Rajye says her father "very much believes he is the king and it's because he leads."
"I have seen the way my parents have worked and how hard they have worked – and that for me is royalty," she says.
Inside the palace which is part home and part hotel, history and heritage has a place on every wall.
There is also a family museum with exhibits tracing the history of the Rathore clan and the rich legacy of Jodhpur's royal descendants.
Portraits of Gaj Singh and his wife and framed pictures of their two children - Shivranjani Rajye and Shivraj Singh – join those of visiting royals like Britain's Prince Charles.
FollowingIndia's independence from imperial rule in 1947, most princely states signed up to be part of the new democratic republic.
The Maharajas initially retained their titles and a degree of autonomy but lost it all, including royal privileges and most of their wealth, after a constitutional amendment in 1971.
Stripped of their annual allowances, the former royals had to find a way to survive in a parliamentary democracy that treated them as commoners.
Many royal families descended into chaos.
Some held onto property, only to lose it amid internal bickering over rival claims.
"The properties that they inherited were in a true sense white elephants," says Karni SinghJasol, Director of Mehrangarh fort and museum.
"The royal families were high on assets, but low on liquidity. They didn't have large bank balances to turn their family properties into something grand or sustain it for the future," he says.
The Singhs of Jodhpur not only maintained their holdings, but managed over decades to grow.
When royal allowances were cancelled in 1971, the young Singh patriarch acted quickly.
The family opened part of its palace as a hotel in 1978, and turned the Mehrangarh fort into a museum, investing profits into preserving Jodhpur's royal antiquities.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/41dea55113642b41bf0c4f963ef88682
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

(16 Sep 2017) LEADIN
When India gained freedom from British colonial rule in 1947, more than 500 princely states — the semi-sovereign principalities ruled by royal clans — opted to join the democratic republic.
Since then some of India's former Royals have reinvented themselves to remain connected to the people they once ruled.
Descendants of what was once the powerful Marwar-Rathore dynasty in Jodhpur continue to thrive , having successfully turned their ancestral properties into modern business enterprises.
STORYLINE
In the summer of 1944, hundreds of royals gathered for the opening of Umaid Bhawan Palace, a magnificent sandstone edifice that dominates the skyline in India's northwestern city of Jodhpur. It was the last of its kind.
Three years later, India was free from British colonial rule, and more than 500 princely states - the semi-sovereign principalities ruled by royal clans - faced an uncertain future.
Most have faded into obscurity, but the family that built this palace continues to thrive - in part by converting a section of it into a hotel.
India's royals may be long gone but the imposing yellow sand stone palace in Jodhpur remains home to the erstwhile MaharajaGaj Singh, the head of the Rahore family of Marwar.
An immaculately preserved wooden lift with a golden panel bordering its ceilings, fitted with an old sofa and an antique fan opens into the elaborate central dome of the palace.
At the entrance is the coat of arms of the Rathore kings who founded Jodhpur city.
Gaj Singh, the grandson of Maharaja Umaid Singh and the current owner of Umaid Bhawan Palace, inherited the property in 1952 at the age of 4 after his father Hanwant Singh died in a plane crash.
He also inherited the ancestral fort of Mehrangarh.
Gaj Singh's daughter Shivranjani Rajye, manages the family's heritage hotels and trusts.
Rajye says her father "very much believes he is the king and it's because he leads."
"I have seen the way my parents have worked and how hard they have worked – and that for me is royalty," she says.
Inside the palace which is part home and part hotel, history and heritage has a place on every wall.
There is also a family museum with exhibits tracing the history of the Rathore clan and the rich legacy of Jodhpur's royal descendants.
Portraits of Gaj Singh and his wife and framed pictures of their two children - Shivranjani Rajye and Shivraj Singh – join those of visiting royals like Britain's Prince Charles.
FollowingIndia's independence from imperial rule in 1947, most princely states signed up to be part of the new democratic republic.
The Maharajas initially retained their titles and a degree of autonomy but lost it all, including royal privileges and most of their wealth, after a constitutional amendment in 1971.
Stripped of their annual allowances, the former royals had to find a way to survive in a parliamentary democracy that treated them as commoners.
Many royal families descended into chaos.
Some held onto property, only to lose it amid internal bickering over rival claims.
"The properties that they inherited were in a true sense white elephants," says Karni SinghJasol, Director of Mehrangarh fort and museum.
"The royal families were high on assets, but low on liquidity. They didn't have large bank balances to turn their family properties into something grand or sustain it for the future," he says.
The Singhs of Jodhpur not only maintained their holdings, but managed over decades to grow.
When royal allowances were cancelled in 1971, the young Singh patriarch acted quickly.
The family opened part of its palace as a hotel in 1978, and turned the Mehrangarh fort into a museum, investing profits into preserving Jodhpur's royal antiquities.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/41dea55113642b41bf0c4f963ef88682
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

Osian’s Group Organizes Preview Of ‘The Indian Antiquities, Modern Contemporary Fine Arts And Books

Click to Subscribe - http://bit.ly/BollywoodRoyal
Bollywood.....the city of dreams is now at your touch! 'Bollywood Royal' is here to mesmerize you with all the news in and around B-town as well as the TelevisionIndustry...all UNCUT and RAW videos ...as it is!! You are welcome to post all your comments as well as subscribe to 'Bollywood Royal' and get the REAL feel of the entertainment industry anywhere, everywhere...all UNCUT! The material is the actual happenings without any edit on the real happenings! Catch your favorite stars, actors, models as they appear!

published: 03 Apr 2017

Osian’s Group Organizes Preview Of ‘The Indian Antiquities, Modern Contemporary Fine Arts And Books

Click to Subscribe - http://bit.ly/BollywoodRoyal
Bollywood.....the city of dreams is now at your touch! 'Bollywood Royal' is here to mesmerize you with all the news in and around B-town as well as the TelevisionIndustry...all UNCUT and RAW videos ...as it is!! You are welcome to post all your comments as well as subscribe to 'Bollywood Royal' and get the REAL feel of the entertainment industry anywhere, everywhere...all UNCUT! The material is the actual happenings without any edit on the real happenings! Catch your favorite stars, actors, models as they appear!

published: 03 Apr 2017

Hue Museum of Royal Fine Arts, Museum of Royal Antiquities, Hue Vietnam

Osian’s Group Organizes Preview Of ‘The Indian Antiquities, Modern Contemporary Fine Arts And Books

Click to Subscribe - http://bit.ly/BollywoodRoyal
Bollywood.....the city of dreams is now at your touch! 'Bollywood Royal' is here to mesmerize you with all the...

Click to Subscribe - http://bit.ly/BollywoodRoyal
Bollywood.....the city of dreams is now at your touch! 'Bollywood Royal' is here to mesmerize you with all the news in and around B-town as well as the TelevisionIndustry...all UNCUT and RAW videos ...as it is!! You are welcome to post all your comments as well as subscribe to 'Bollywood Royal' and get the REAL feel of the entertainment industry anywhere, everywhere...all UNCUT! The material is the actual happenings without any edit on the real happenings! Catch your favorite stars, actors, models as they appear!

Click to Subscribe - http://bit.ly/BollywoodRoyal
Bollywood.....the city of dreams is now at your touch! 'Bollywood Royal' is here to mesmerize you with all the news in and around B-town as well as the TelevisionIndustry...all UNCUT and RAW videos ...as it is!! You are welcome to post all your comments as well as subscribe to 'Bollywood Royal' and get the REAL feel of the entertainment industry anywhere, everywhere...all UNCUT! The material is the actual happenings without any edit on the real happenings! Catch your favorite stars, actors, models as they appear!

published:03 Apr 2017

views:67

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Osian’s Group Organizes Preview Of ‘The Indian Antiquities, Modern Contemporary Fine Arts And Books

Click to Subscribe - http://bit.ly/BollywoodRoyal
Bollywood.....the city of dreams is now at your touch! 'Bollywood Royal' is here to mesmerize you with all the...

Click to Subscribe - http://bit.ly/BollywoodRoyal
Bollywood.....the city of dreams is now at your touch! 'Bollywood Royal' is here to mesmerize you with all the news in and around B-town as well as the TelevisionIndustry...all UNCUT and RAW videos ...as it is!! You are welcome to post all your comments as well as subscribe to 'Bollywood Royal' and get the REAL feel of the entertainment industry anywhere, everywhere...all UNCUT! The material is the actual happenings without any edit on the real happenings! Catch your favorite stars, actors, models as they appear!

Click to Subscribe - http://bit.ly/BollywoodRoyal
Bollywood.....the city of dreams is now at your touch! 'Bollywood Royal' is here to mesmerize you with all the news in and around B-town as well as the TelevisionIndustry...all UNCUT and RAW videos ...as it is!! You are welcome to post all your comments as well as subscribe to 'Bollywood Royal' and get the REAL feel of the entertainment industry anywhere, everywhere...all UNCUT! The material is the actual happenings without any edit on the real happenings! Catch your favorite stars, actors, models as they appear!

published:03 Apr 2017

views:131

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Hue Museum of Royal Fine Arts, Museum of Royal Antiquities, Hue Vietnam

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix
Thanks to the folks at: http://bibliotecadigital.rah.es/dgbrah/i18n/consulta/registro.cmd?id=5968

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix
Thanks to the folks at: http://bibliotecadigital.rah.es/dgbrah/i18n/consulta/registro.cmd?id=5968

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix
Thanks to the folks at: http://bibliotecadigital.rah.es/dgbrah/i18n/consulta/registro.cmd?id=5968

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix
Thanks to the folks at: http://bibliotecadigital.rah.es/dgbrah/i18n/consulta/registro.cmd?id=5968

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix
Thanks to the folks at: http://bibliotecadigital.rah.es/dgbrah/i18n/consulta/registro.cmd?id=5968

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix
Thanks to the folks at: http://bibliotecadigital.rah.es/dgbrah/i18n/consulta/registro.cmd?id=5968

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix
Thanks to the folks at: http://bibliotecadigital.rah.es/dgbrah/i18n/consulta/registro.cmd?id=5968

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix
Thanks to the folks at: http://bibliotecadigital.rah.es/dgbrah/i18n/consulta/registro.cmd?id=5968

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix
Thanks to the folks at: http://bibliotecadigital.rah.es/dgbrah/i18n/consulta/registro.cmd?id=5968

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix
Thanks to the folks at: http://bibliotecadigital.rah.es/dgbrah/i18n/consulta/registro.cmd?id=5968

The Thracians, a Hidden History - HD 2013

About the northern Thracians' descendants on http://www.wonderful-romania.com/
About the movie: http://thracians.info/
Europe's ancient history should be re-written! Long before Rome came into existence and before Greece flourished, the Thracian stirpes have populated vast areas of the European continent and they left their mark on its whole history.
We invite you on a journey to Europe's antiquity, where a new vision over ancient history will be presented to you. Many of the things you have considered before, as being well established, will be shaken. Little known facts and events will come to redefine history as you know it...The material evidence and historical sources prove that the Thracians had an advanced culture and that they were sophisticated art creators; also, that the Gree...

Taínos BBC Spirits of the Jaguar 3of4 Hunters of the Caribbean Sea

Documental sobre la etnia Taína a la llegada de los Europeos al Nuevo Mundo. Episodio completo sobre los Taínos. Filmado en Puerto Rico.
Puerto Rico: Historians believe the island nation was once ruled by about 20 Taíno "Caciques," or states, and sheltered dozens of Taíno cities. One unearthed by archaeologists boasted seven plazas and is believed to have held thousands of residents, who eventually succumbed to the Spanish soldiers and European diseases that followed Columbus's arrival in the New World in 1492.
Hurricane, canoe, barbecue, hammock. The words roll comfortably off our tongues, but they were probably first spoken by voices from the past: the Taíno, the virtually forgotten people who first occupied the Caribbean islands more than 2,000 years ago. Archaeologists believe the T...

published: 13 May 2014

Michael Cremo: "Forbidden Archaeology" | Talks at Google

Michael A. CremoHistorian of Archeology
Abstract:
Over the past two centuries, archaeologists have found bones, footprints, and artifacts showing that people like ourselves have existed on earth for many millions of years. But many scientists have forgotten or ignored these remarkable facts. Why? Primarily because they contradict the now dominant evolutionary views about human origins and antiquity. According to these views, humans like ourselves have existed for only about 100,000 or 200,000 years, and before that there were only more primitive human ancestors. This evolutionary paradigm, to which influential groups of scientists are deeply committed, has acted as a "knowledge filter." And the filtering, intentional or not, has left us with a radically incomplete set of facts for buildi...

published: 07 Oct 2014

ACOR Lecture: Excavations at the Fortified Royal Palace of Machaerus by Dr. Győző Vörös

Excavations at the FortifiedRoyal Palace of Machaerus by Dr. Győző Vörös
16 December 2016
Dr. Vörös will provide an illustrated lecture outlining the work of the Hungarian Machaerus ResearchProject as well as background about previous excavation campaigns at the site. This lecture celebrates the publication of Machaerus II—The Hungarian Archaeological Mission in the Light of the American-Baptist and Italian-Franciscan Excavations and Surveys—Final Report1968—2015. This handsome and informative volume, published by the Edizioni Terra Santa (Milan, Italy), is the genesis of this celebratory lecture.
Dr. Vörös is an archaeologist and architect, who has been conducting excavations and surveys on the site of Mukawer, ancient Machaerus, since 2009 in conjunction with the Jordanian Dep...

Roads of Arabia Documentary

An exceptional documentary shot across the whole of Saudi Arabia, across its deserts, mountains and ruins has made every attempt to restore its undisputed position as the 'Open museum" of the world with the rarest of rare antiquities that date back to one million years into Paleolithic Ages.
For further information: http://bit.ly/Tta1av

REAL King Tut DNA Test = BLACK 100%

The link below will take you directly to the actual DNA test results of King Tut, Amenhotep III and others in the royal family.
http://dnatribes.com/dnatribes-digest-2012-01-01.pdf
Interesting how the Eurocentrists collaborate and conspire to postulate false and even downright preposterous evidence but they consistently fail to produce any concrete FACTS or EVIDENCE for their false claims. Although Zahi Hawass the EX Egyptologist in charge of Egypt's antiquities was and is a whore who would and has sold out to the highest bidder especially if they are a party to his ministry of misinformation.
Now regarding this King Tut is Western European nonsense, it's interesting that this lie was created by a retired physician who saw a program on television as they were doing the DNA testing, sa...

The Secret Vault of Egyptian Treasures Hidden on the Giza Plateau [VIDEO]

Reveals the true purpose behind the pyramids of Giza and the location of the secret vault of Egyptian treasures hidden on the Giza plateau. Details how the first 16 pyramids represent the allegorical “dismembered body of Osiris” and the legendary missing part is a secret underground chamber
Explains how the pyramids were built as recovery vaults and with the secret chamber contained everything needed to rebuild civilization after the Deluge. Examines the technology used to build the pyramids and “fly the stones into place” After nearly 200 years of the pyramid-as-tomb theory, a growing body of evidence suggests the first 16 pyramids of ancient Egypt were not royal tombs but nearly indestructible recovery vaults designed to revive civilization after an anticipated major catastrophe, the D...

The Thracians, a Hidden History - HD 2013

About the northern Thracians' descendants on http://www.wonderful-romania.com/
About the movie: http://thracians.info/
Europe's ancient history should be re-wri...

About the northern Thracians' descendants on http://www.wonderful-romania.com/
About the movie: http://thracians.info/
Europe's ancient history should be re-written! Long before Rome came into existence and before Greece flourished, the Thracian stirpes have populated vast areas of the European continent and they left their mark on its whole history.
We invite you on a journey to Europe's antiquity, where a new vision over ancient history will be presented to you. Many of the things you have considered before, as being well established, will be shaken. Little known facts and events will come to redefine history as you know it...The material evidence and historical sources prove that the Thracians had an advanced culture and that they were sophisticated art creators; also, that the Greek world was strongly influenced by the Thracian one, the Greeks borrowing traditions and deities from the Thracians.
Concurrently, the excursion into the ancient Thracian-Geto-Dacian world will bring to you a close-up of the amazing gold and silver ancient treasures and the remarkable personalities of certain Thracian heroes that have remained deeply carved into humanity's memory.
Last but not least, you will discover that Thracian-Geto-Dacians have even reached as far as the rule of the Roman Empire themselves, a fact that was clearly mentioned and beyond any doubt by the Roman ancient historic sources themselves...
May this documentary's viewing be a useful one to you!
DANIEL ROXIN te invită pe site-ul http://www.cunoastelumea.ro Știință, mistere, istorie, dezvăluiri...

About the northern Thracians' descendants on http://www.wonderful-romania.com/
About the movie: http://thracians.info/
Europe's ancient history should be re-written! Long before Rome came into existence and before Greece flourished, the Thracian stirpes have populated vast areas of the European continent and they left their mark on its whole history.
We invite you on a journey to Europe's antiquity, where a new vision over ancient history will be presented to you. Many of the things you have considered before, as being well established, will be shaken. Little known facts and events will come to redefine history as you know it...The material evidence and historical sources prove that the Thracians had an advanced culture and that they were sophisticated art creators; also, that the Greek world was strongly influenced by the Thracian one, the Greeks borrowing traditions and deities from the Thracians.
Concurrently, the excursion into the ancient Thracian-Geto-Dacian world will bring to you a close-up of the amazing gold and silver ancient treasures and the remarkable personalities of certain Thracian heroes that have remained deeply carved into humanity's memory.
Last but not least, you will discover that Thracian-Geto-Dacians have even reached as far as the rule of the Roman Empire themselves, a fact that was clearly mentioned and beyond any doubt by the Roman ancient historic sources themselves...
May this documentary's viewing be a useful one to you!
DANIEL ROXIN te invită pe site-ul http://www.cunoastelumea.ro Știință, mistere, istorie, dezvăluiri...

UnchartedThe LostLegacy collectible Guide for All Chapters. There are 68 Treasures, 28 Photos, 21 Lockboxes and 17 Optional Conversations. There are also 11 Hoysala Tokens. The tokens are in their own video - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EDK06wAgW0E&
TimelinePrologue - 0:05
Chapter 1 - 1:06
Chapter 2 - 1:45
Chapter 3 - 3:58
Chapter 4 7:42
Chapter 5 - 23:20
Chapter 6 - 30:13
Chapter 7 - 34:01
Chapter 8 - 43:46
Chapter 9 - 50:25
You will earn the following trophies
CasualTreasure Hunter - Find 5 treasures
Hardcore Treasure Hunter - Find 35 treasures
Collector of Antiquities - Find all the treasures
#nofilter - Take a photo at 5 photo opportunities
Pics or It Didn't Happen - Take a photo at all the photo opportunities
Five Finger Discount - Open 5 lockboxes
Picks or It Didn't Happen - Open every lockbox
Getting to Know You - Listen to all optional conversations
Tip? Your support is appreciated - goo.gl/b7l2kO
► Support me on Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/PS4Trophies
Twitch ► http://www.twitch.tv/ps4trophies
Twitter ► https://twitter.com/PS4_Trophies
Website ► http://www.ps4trophiesgaming.com/
#PS4Trophies #Trophy #Walkthrough #Gameplay #LetsPlay
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
★ This Game includes the following trophies ★
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
Don’tRuinThe Moment
Collect all the Trophies
Legacy Found!
Complete the Game
Progress Demands Sacrifice
Complete the Game in Crushing mode
Casual Treasure Hunter
Find 5 treasures
Hardcore Treasure Hunter
Find 35 treasures
Collector of Antiquities
Find all the treasures
Shake For Your FortuneAsk Skeleseer a question
Token For Granted
Find a Hoysala Token
Yas Queen
Find all the Hoysala tokens and obtain the Queen’sRuby
Five Finger Discount
Open 5 lockboxes
Picks or It Didn’t Happen
Open every lockbox
#nofilter
Take a photo at 5 photo opportunities
Pics or It Didn’t Happen
Take a photo at all the photo opportunities
Getting to Know You
Listen to all optional conversations
Si Vis Pacem Para Bellum
Use every gun in the game
Were You Counting?
Defeat an enemy with the last bullet in your handgun clip
10 Up, 10 Down
Defeat 10 enemies with headshots in a row
Frazer. Chloe Frazer.
Defeat 5 consecutive enemies with the silenced pistol without being detected.
Itchy Trigger Finger
Defeat 20 enemies firing from-the-hip
Stay and Pray
Defeat 20 enemies blind-firing from cover
Tip of the Hat
Stealth take-down 10 armored enemies with melee by first removing their helmets
Royal Demolitionist
Defeat 20 enemies with C4
On the GridMark 30 enemies
I Was Never Here
Open a lockbox with enemies nearby
C-Phoria
Defeat 4 enemies with one C4 detonation
Just the Wind
Stealth take-down 15 enemies in a row
Now You See Me…
Break stealth and re-enter stealth successfully
Wingwoman
Perform 10 combo partner takedowns
The Way of the Warrior
Make it to the outskirts of Halebidu in Chapter 5 without using a firearm or explosive
The Sampler
Defeat 5 enemies, each one taking damage from a handgun, long-gun, and…
Make an Entrance
Defeat enemies with the vehicle, long-gun, melee, and grenade, in that order, in 20 seconds
Bring in the Big Guns
Defeat 30 enemies with gold weapons
4x4x4
Defeat 4 enemies with the vehicle 20 seconds
Drop Me a Line
Use all the zip-lines to traverse the city
Your Prize
Appreciate the view at the top of the Hoysala EmpireBestDriver in the BusinessDrive from the Ganesh mountain carving to the top of the waterfall at the TridentFortFlawlessGauntlet
Get through all 3 Axe Fort trials without resetting any boards
Quiet as a Mouse
After entering the Trident Fort, reach the door without being seen
Tarzana
Perform 5 grapple swings in a row without touching the ground
Stunt It!
Get 30 seconds of total airtime with the vehicle
ShadowTheater
Complete the shadow puzzle in 10 moves or less
Marco Po-No
Play in the water in the dam in Halebidu
Fingersmith
Pick a three pin lock in under 15 seconds
Overkill
Plant multiple C4 charges on the APC at the same time and destroy it with one massive detonation
Cannonball
Perform an impressive dive from the cliff near the old railroad tracks
Right Under Your NoseDestroy the helicopter without defeating any other enemies
CombatRacing
Ram 10 motorcycles
Backseat Driver
Commandeer 6 vehicles by jumping on them and kicking out the driver
Here, Catch!
Destroy a vehicle in Chapter 9 with an explosive
Let’s Not Get Caught
Drive over the edge in the Western Ghats

UnchartedThe LostLegacy collectible Guide for All Chapters. There are 68 Treasures, 28 Photos, 21 Lockboxes and 17 Optional Conversations. There are also 11 Hoysala Tokens. The tokens are in their own video - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EDK06wAgW0E&
TimelinePrologue - 0:05
Chapter 1 - 1:06
Chapter 2 - 1:45
Chapter 3 - 3:58
Chapter 4 7:42
Chapter 5 - 23:20
Chapter 6 - 30:13
Chapter 7 - 34:01
Chapter 8 - 43:46
Chapter 9 - 50:25
You will earn the following trophies
CasualTreasure Hunter - Find 5 treasures
Hardcore Treasure Hunter - Find 35 treasures
Collector of Antiquities - Find all the treasures
#nofilter - Take a photo at 5 photo opportunities
Pics or It Didn't Happen - Take a photo at all the photo opportunities
Five Finger Discount - Open 5 lockboxes
Picks or It Didn't Happen - Open every lockbox
Getting to Know You - Listen to all optional conversations
Tip? Your support is appreciated - goo.gl/b7l2kO
► Support me on Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/PS4Trophies
Twitch ► http://www.twitch.tv/ps4trophies
Twitter ► https://twitter.com/PS4_Trophies
Website ► http://www.ps4trophiesgaming.com/
#PS4Trophies #Trophy #Walkthrough #Gameplay #LetsPlay
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
★ This Game includes the following trophies ★
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
Don’tRuinThe Moment
Collect all the Trophies
Legacy Found!
Complete the Game
Progress Demands Sacrifice
Complete the Game in Crushing mode
Casual Treasure Hunter
Find 5 treasures
Hardcore Treasure Hunter
Find 35 treasures
Collector of Antiquities
Find all the treasures
Shake For Your FortuneAsk Skeleseer a question
Token For Granted
Find a Hoysala Token
Yas Queen
Find all the Hoysala tokens and obtain the Queen’sRuby
Five Finger Discount
Open 5 lockboxes
Picks or It Didn’t Happen
Open every lockbox
#nofilter
Take a photo at 5 photo opportunities
Pics or It Didn’t Happen
Take a photo at all the photo opportunities
Getting to Know You
Listen to all optional conversations
Si Vis Pacem Para Bellum
Use every gun in the game
Were You Counting?
Defeat an enemy with the last bullet in your handgun clip
10 Up, 10 Down
Defeat 10 enemies with headshots in a row
Frazer. Chloe Frazer.
Defeat 5 consecutive enemies with the silenced pistol without being detected.
Itchy Trigger Finger
Defeat 20 enemies firing from-the-hip
Stay and Pray
Defeat 20 enemies blind-firing from cover
Tip of the Hat
Stealth take-down 10 armored enemies with melee by first removing their helmets
Royal Demolitionist
Defeat 20 enemies with C4
On the GridMark 30 enemies
I Was Never Here
Open a lockbox with enemies nearby
C-Phoria
Defeat 4 enemies with one C4 detonation
Just the Wind
Stealth take-down 15 enemies in a row
Now You See Me…
Break stealth and re-enter stealth successfully
Wingwoman
Perform 10 combo partner takedowns
The Way of the Warrior
Make it to the outskirts of Halebidu in Chapter 5 without using a firearm or explosive
The Sampler
Defeat 5 enemies, each one taking damage from a handgun, long-gun, and…
Make an Entrance
Defeat enemies with the vehicle, long-gun, melee, and grenade, in that order, in 20 seconds
Bring in the Big Guns
Defeat 30 enemies with gold weapons
4x4x4
Defeat 4 enemies with the vehicle 20 seconds
Drop Me a Line
Use all the zip-lines to traverse the city
Your Prize
Appreciate the view at the top of the Hoysala EmpireBestDriver in the BusinessDrive from the Ganesh mountain carving to the top of the waterfall at the TridentFortFlawlessGauntlet
Get through all 3 Axe Fort trials without resetting any boards
Quiet as a Mouse
After entering the Trident Fort, reach the door without being seen
Tarzana
Perform 5 grapple swings in a row without touching the ground
Stunt It!
Get 30 seconds of total airtime with the vehicle
ShadowTheater
Complete the shadow puzzle in 10 moves or less
Marco Po-No
Play in the water in the dam in Halebidu
Fingersmith
Pick a three pin lock in under 15 seconds
Overkill
Plant multiple C4 charges on the APC at the same time and destroy it with one massive detonation
Cannonball
Perform an impressive dive from the cliff near the old railroad tracks
Right Under Your NoseDestroy the helicopter without defeating any other enemies
CombatRacing
Ram 10 motorcycles
Backseat Driver
Commandeer 6 vehicles by jumping on them and kicking out the driver
Here, Catch!
Destroy a vehicle in Chapter 9 with an explosive
Let’s Not Get Caught
Drive over the edge in the Western Ghats

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix
Thanks to the folks at: http://bibliotecadigital.rah.es/dgbrah/i18n/consulta/registro.cmd?id=5968

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix
Thanks to the folks at: http://bibliotecadigital.rah.es/dgbrah/i18n/consulta/registro.cmd?id=5968

Documental sobre la etnia Taína a la llegada de los Europeos al Nuevo Mundo. Episodio completo sobre los Taínos. Filmado en Puerto Rico.
Puerto Rico: Historians believe the island nation was once ruled by about 20 Taíno "Caciques," or states, and sheltered dozens of Taíno cities. One unearthed by archaeologists boasted seven plazas and is believed to have held thousands of residents, who eventually succumbed to the Spanish soldiers and European diseases that followed Columbus's arrival in the New World in 1492.
Hurricane, canoe, barbecue, hammock. The words roll comfortably off our tongues, but they were probably first spoken by voices from the past: the Taíno, the virtually forgotten people who first occupied the Caribbean islands more than 2,000 years ago. Archaeologists believe the Taíno, whose story is told in the third installment of SPIRITS OF THE JAGUAR, originally lived on the shores of northeastern South America, near present-day Venezuela.
As their population grew, it became traditional for young people to be evicted from their villages and sent out into wilderness to found new settlements. Eventually, some pioneering groups built log canoes and began settling the islands that could be seen offshore to the east, low on the horizon. Over the centuries, they island-hopped their way north through the Caribbean, eventually following the crescent of islets all the way to the Florida peninsula.
By the 1400s, the Taíno had forged a highly organized society divided into dozens of political divisions similar to states. Puerto Rico, for instance, is believed to have been governed by about 20 "Caciques," or states, while Hispaniola (the island which includes Haiti and the Dominican Republic) was divided into five Caciques. In addition to providing defense against raiding parties from hostile islands, the nobles who led the caciques sponsored artists, shepherded the economy, and organized periodic festivals that brought Taino communities together for games and religious celebrations. The games weren't always just for fun: the Taíno version of soccer, for instance, was played with a potentially lethal solid ball made from rubber and cotton. Players wore special protective belts and pads to protect their bodies.
For more than 200 years, from 1200 to the late 1400s, Taíno chiefs were lords of millions of island inhabitants. In 1492, however, they were among the first New Worlders to welcome Columbus -- and the meeting marked the beginning of the end for the Taíno. Unable to resist either the disease brought by the Europeans or their military might, the Taíno culture collapsed and virtually disappeared. For generations, it attracted little notice from historians or archaeologists.
In 1492, the Taíno were among the first to welcome Columbus.
In recent years, however, spectacular finds have rekindled interest in the original inhabitants of the Caribbean. In 1997, for instance, archaeologists found the remains of a major Taíno city on the eastern most part of the Dominican Republic. The discovery of the city's long-hidden ceremonial plazas and homes "is going to give us more insight into the Taíno than has ever been known before," says Indiana University archaeologist Charles Beeker.
Particularly exciting is the treasure trove of artwork and everyday items found, almost perfectly preserved, in a 200-foot-deep cenote, or natural well, next to the ancient city. Everything from wooden axes and pottery to woven baskets and jewelry sits in silt at the bottom of the pool, according to divers. There is even a priceless "duho," the carved wooden throne of a Taíno chief. For perhaps 500 years, the throne has sat empty, waiting for its royal owner to return.(from:http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/spirits/html/tainobodytaino.html)

Documental sobre la etnia Taína a la llegada de los Europeos al Nuevo Mundo. Episodio completo sobre los Taínos. Filmado en Puerto Rico.
Puerto Rico: Historians believe the island nation was once ruled by about 20 Taíno "Caciques," or states, and sheltered dozens of Taíno cities. One unearthed by archaeologists boasted seven plazas and is believed to have held thousands of residents, who eventually succumbed to the Spanish soldiers and European diseases that followed Columbus's arrival in the New World in 1492.
Hurricane, canoe, barbecue, hammock. The words roll comfortably off our tongues, but they were probably first spoken by voices from the past: the Taíno, the virtually forgotten people who first occupied the Caribbean islands more than 2,000 years ago. Archaeologists believe the Taíno, whose story is told in the third installment of SPIRITS OF THE JAGUAR, originally lived on the shores of northeastern South America, near present-day Venezuela.
As their population grew, it became traditional for young people to be evicted from their villages and sent out into wilderness to found new settlements. Eventually, some pioneering groups built log canoes and began settling the islands that could be seen offshore to the east, low on the horizon. Over the centuries, they island-hopped their way north through the Caribbean, eventually following the crescent of islets all the way to the Florida peninsula.
By the 1400s, the Taíno had forged a highly organized society divided into dozens of political divisions similar to states. Puerto Rico, for instance, is believed to have been governed by about 20 "Caciques," or states, while Hispaniola (the island which includes Haiti and the Dominican Republic) was divided into five Caciques. In addition to providing defense against raiding parties from hostile islands, the nobles who led the caciques sponsored artists, shepherded the economy, and organized periodic festivals that brought Taino communities together for games and religious celebrations. The games weren't always just for fun: the Taíno version of soccer, for instance, was played with a potentially lethal solid ball made from rubber and cotton. Players wore special protective belts and pads to protect their bodies.
For more than 200 years, from 1200 to the late 1400s, Taíno chiefs were lords of millions of island inhabitants. In 1492, however, they were among the first New Worlders to welcome Columbus -- and the meeting marked the beginning of the end for the Taíno. Unable to resist either the disease brought by the Europeans or their military might, the Taíno culture collapsed and virtually disappeared. For generations, it attracted little notice from historians or archaeologists.
In 1492, the Taíno were among the first to welcome Columbus.
In recent years, however, spectacular finds have rekindled interest in the original inhabitants of the Caribbean. In 1997, for instance, archaeologists found the remains of a major Taíno city on the eastern most part of the Dominican Republic. The discovery of the city's long-hidden ceremonial plazas and homes "is going to give us more insight into the Taíno than has ever been known before," says Indiana University archaeologist Charles Beeker.
Particularly exciting is the treasure trove of artwork and everyday items found, almost perfectly preserved, in a 200-foot-deep cenote, or natural well, next to the ancient city. Everything from wooden axes and pottery to woven baskets and jewelry sits in silt at the bottom of the pool, according to divers. There is even a priceless "duho," the carved wooden throne of a Taíno chief. For perhaps 500 years, the throne has sat empty, waiting for its royal owner to return.(from:http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/spirits/html/tainobodytaino.html)

Michael A. CremoHistorian of Archeology
Abstract:
Over the past two centuries, archaeologists have found bones, footprints, and artifacts showing that people like ourselves have existed on earth for many millions of years. But many scientists have forgotten or ignored these remarkable facts. Why? Primarily because they contradict the now dominant evolutionary views about human origins and antiquity. According to these views, humans like ourselves have existed for only about 100,000 or 200,000 years, and before that there were only more primitive human ancestors. This evolutionary paradigm, to which influential groups of scientists are deeply committed, has acted as a "knowledge filter." And the filtering, intentional or not, has left us with a radically incomplete set of facts for building our ideas about human origins. Recovering the complete set of facts takes us on a fascinating expedition, across five continents to various archaeological sites, some long forgotten, some the center of ongoing controversy. On the other hand, the complete set of facts is consistent with the accounts of extreme human antiquity found in the Puranas, the historical writings of ancient India.
Bio:
Michael A. Cremo is research associate in history of archeology. He is a member of the World Archaeological Congress (WAC) since 1993. His WAC3 paper "Puranic Time and the Archaeological Record" was published in the Routledge One WorldArchaeology series volume Time and Archaeology (1999), edited by Tim Murray. He is also a member of the European Association of Archaeologists (EAA). In 2004 Cremo's paper "The LaterDiscoveries of Boucher de Perthes at Moulin Quignon and Their Impact on the Moulin Quignon Jaw Controversy," presented at the XXth InternationalCongress for History of Science, Liege, Belgium, was published in a conference proceedings volume of this congress, by the scientific publisher Brepols.
Cremo is the principal author of the book Forbidden Archeology, a comprehensive historical survey of archaeological anomalies. In a review in British Journal for History of Science, Tim Murray said the book "provides the historian of archaeology with a useful compendium of case studies in the history and sociology of scientific knowledge, which can be used to foster debate within archaeology about how to describe the epistemology of one's discipline."
Cremo is particularly interested in examining the history of the archeology from the standpoint of alternative worldviews, particularly worldviews with foundations in ancient Indian thought. He has given invited lectures on his work at the Royal Institution in London, the anthropology department of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow, the archeology department of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, and many other scientific institutions. He has also lectured on his work at universities throughout the world.

Michael A. CremoHistorian of Archeology
Abstract:
Over the past two centuries, archaeologists have found bones, footprints, and artifacts showing that people like ourselves have existed on earth for many millions of years. But many scientists have forgotten or ignored these remarkable facts. Why? Primarily because they contradict the now dominant evolutionary views about human origins and antiquity. According to these views, humans like ourselves have existed for only about 100,000 or 200,000 years, and before that there were only more primitive human ancestors. This evolutionary paradigm, to which influential groups of scientists are deeply committed, has acted as a "knowledge filter." And the filtering, intentional or not, has left us with a radically incomplete set of facts for building our ideas about human origins. Recovering the complete set of facts takes us on a fascinating expedition, across five continents to various archaeological sites, some long forgotten, some the center of ongoing controversy. On the other hand, the complete set of facts is consistent with the accounts of extreme human antiquity found in the Puranas, the historical writings of ancient India.
Bio:
Michael A. Cremo is research associate in history of archeology. He is a member of the World Archaeological Congress (WAC) since 1993. His WAC3 paper "Puranic Time and the Archaeological Record" was published in the Routledge One WorldArchaeology series volume Time and Archaeology (1999), edited by Tim Murray. He is also a member of the European Association of Archaeologists (EAA). In 2004 Cremo's paper "The LaterDiscoveries of Boucher de Perthes at Moulin Quignon and Their Impact on the Moulin Quignon Jaw Controversy," presented at the XXth InternationalCongress for History of Science, Liege, Belgium, was published in a conference proceedings volume of this congress, by the scientific publisher Brepols.
Cremo is the principal author of the book Forbidden Archeology, a comprehensive historical survey of archaeological anomalies. In a review in British Journal for History of Science, Tim Murray said the book "provides the historian of archaeology with a useful compendium of case studies in the history and sociology of scientific knowledge, which can be used to foster debate within archaeology about how to describe the epistemology of one's discipline."
Cremo is particularly interested in examining the history of the archeology from the standpoint of alternative worldviews, particularly worldviews with foundations in ancient Indian thought. He has given invited lectures on his work at the Royal Institution in London, the anthropology department of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow, the archeology department of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, and many other scientific institutions. He has also lectured on his work at universities throughout the world.

published:07 Oct 2014

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ACOR Lecture: Excavations at the Fortified Royal Palace of Machaerus by Dr. Győző Vörös

Excavations at the FortifiedRoyal Palace of Machaerus by Dr. Győző Vörös
16 December 2016
Dr. Vörös will provide an illustrated lecture outlining the work of the Hungarian Machaerus ResearchProject as well as background about previous excavation campaigns at the site. This lecture celebrates the publication of Machaerus II—The Hungarian Archaeological Mission in the Light of the American-Baptist and Italian-Franciscan Excavations and Surveys—Final Report1968—2015. This handsome and informative volume, published by the Edizioni Terra Santa (Milan, Italy), is the genesis of this celebratory lecture.
Dr. Vörös is an archaeologist and architect, who has been conducting excavations and surveys on the site of Mukawer, ancient Machaerus, since 2009 in conjunction with the Jordanian Department of Antiquities. He published the first volume on this site, Machaerus I, in 2013.
Vörös’ previous archaeological projects were in Egypt and Cyprus, where he served as the Director of the Hungarian Excavations since 1994. His Egyptological publications include excavation reports on the ThothHillTemple in Thebes, the seaside acropolises of Taposiris Magna (west of Alexandria), and Paphos (the Greco-Roman capital of Cyprus).
Please note that the recording of ACOR lectures is not allowed without the permission of the presenter who would in turn inform ACOR.

Excavations at the FortifiedRoyal Palace of Machaerus by Dr. Győző Vörös
16 December 2016
Dr. Vörös will provide an illustrated lecture outlining the work of the Hungarian Machaerus ResearchProject as well as background about previous excavation campaigns at the site. This lecture celebrates the publication of Machaerus II—The Hungarian Archaeological Mission in the Light of the American-Baptist and Italian-Franciscan Excavations and Surveys—Final Report1968—2015. This handsome and informative volume, published by the Edizioni Terra Santa (Milan, Italy), is the genesis of this celebratory lecture.
Dr. Vörös is an archaeologist and architect, who has been conducting excavations and surveys on the site of Mukawer, ancient Machaerus, since 2009 in conjunction with the Jordanian Department of Antiquities. He published the first volume on this site, Machaerus I, in 2013.
Vörös’ previous archaeological projects were in Egypt and Cyprus, where he served as the Director of the Hungarian Excavations since 1994. His Egyptological publications include excavation reports on the ThothHillTemple in Thebes, the seaside acropolises of Taposiris Magna (west of Alexandria), and Paphos (the Greco-Roman capital of Cyprus).
Please note that the recording of ACOR lectures is not allowed without the permission of the presenter who would in turn inform ACOR.

Roads of Arabia Documentary

An exceptional documentary shot across the whole of Saudi Arabia, across its deserts, mountains and ruins has made every attempt to restore its undisputed posit...

An exceptional documentary shot across the whole of Saudi Arabia, across its deserts, mountains and ruins has made every attempt to restore its undisputed position as the 'Open museum" of the world with the rarest of rare antiquities that date back to one million years into Paleolithic Ages.
For further information: http://bit.ly/Tta1av

An exceptional documentary shot across the whole of Saudi Arabia, across its deserts, mountains and ruins has made every attempt to restore its undisputed position as the 'Open museum" of the world with the rarest of rare antiquities that date back to one million years into Paleolithic Ages.
For further information: http://bit.ly/Tta1av

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix

Antiquities of Mexico : comprising fac-similes of AncientMexican Paintings and Hierogliphics, preserved in the RoyalLibraries of Paris, Berlin and Dresden; in the Imperial Library of Vienna; in the Vatican Library; in the BorgianMuseum at Rome; in the Library of the Institute al Bologna, and in the Bodleian Library at Oxford; together with the Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix; the whole illustrated with many valuables inedit Manuscripts by Lord Kingsborough; the drawings on stone by A. Aglio
Vol.I. Copy of the Collection of Mendoza, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (73 pág.); Copy of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis, preserved in the Royal Library at Paris (93 pág.); Fac-simile of the original Mexican HieroglyphicPainting, from the Collection of Boturini (23 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the Collection of Sir Thomas Bodley in the Bodleian Library at Oxford (40 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Hieroglyphic Painting, preserved in the Selden Collection of Manuscripsts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. -- Vol.II. Copy of a Mexican Manuscripts, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (149 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting given to the University of Oxford by Archbishop Laud, and preserved in the Bodleian Library (46 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Institute at Bologna (24 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna (66 pág.); Fac-similes of original Mexican Paintings deposited in the Royal Library at Berlin by the Baron de Humboldt, and of Mexican Bas-relief preserved in the Royal Cabinet of Antiques. -- Vol.III. Fac-simile of an original Mexican painting, preserved in the Borgian Museums, at College of Propaganda in Rome (76 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Royal Library at Dresden (74 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting in the possession of M. de Fejérváry, at Pess in Hungary (44 pág.); Fac-simile of an original Mexican Painting, preserved in the Library of the Vatican (96 pág.). -- Vol. IV. Monuments of New Spain by M. Dupaix, from the original drawings executed by order of the King of Spain Specimens of Mexican Sculpture, in the possession of M. LatourAllard in Paris; Specimens of Mexican preserved in the British Museum; Plates copied from the Giro del Mondo of Gemelli Careri: with an engraving of a Mexican Cycle, from a painting formerly in the possession of Boturini; Specimen of Peruvian Quipis, with plates representing a carved Peruvian box containing a collection of supposed Peruvian Quipus. -- Vol.V. Extrait de l'ouvrage de M. de Humboldt sur Les Monuments de l'Amerique; Esplicación [sic.] de la Colección de Mendoza; Explicación del Codez Telleriano-Remensis; Codice Mexicano che si conserva nella Biblioteca Vaticana; Viages [sic.] de Guillermo Dupaix sobre Antigüedades Mexicanas; Libro sexto de la Retórica y Filosofía Moral y Teológica de la gente mexicana donde hay cosas muy curiosas tocantes a los primores de la lengua y cosas muy delicadas tocantes a las virtudes morales / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VI. HistoriaUniversal de las cosas de la Nueva España / por...Bernardino de Sahagún. -- Vol.VII. Appendix: the interpretatione of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Collection of Mendoza; The explanation of the Hieroglyphical Paintings of the Codex Telleriano-Remensis; The traslation of the explanation of the Mexican Paintings of the Codex Vaticanus; The monuments of the New Spain by M. Dupaix

The link below will take you directly to the actual DNA test results of King Tut, Amenhotep III and others in the royal family.
http://dnatribes.com/dnatribes-digest-2012-01-01.pdf
Interesting how the Eurocentrists collaborate and conspire to postulate false and even downright preposterous evidence but they consistently fail to produce any concrete FACTS or EVIDENCE for their false claims. Although Zahi Hawass the EX Egyptologist in charge of Egypt's antiquities was and is a whore who would and has sold out to the highest bidder especially if they are a party to his ministry of misinformation.
Now regarding this King Tut is Western European nonsense, it's interesting that this lie was created by a retired physician who saw a program on television as they were doing the DNA testing, saw a DNA printout hanging on a wall, analyzed THAT only then put out this nonsense that King Tut was European in order to appease the gullible who are so utterly desperate to be that which they quite clearly are not.
It matters not to the desperate that this physicians tactics have been refuted or that members of the actual DNA team who tested the mummies stated that his findings are "impossible". It matters NOT. The willfully ignorant and gullible just require ANYTHING at all that they may hang their hats upon to try to validate that which they only wish were true.
On this video we shall present the ACTUAL and FACTUAL DNA test results of King Tut's mummy, his grandfather Akhenaten III and others of the royal family.
Don't be dismayed if you don't quite comprehend what you see. It's pretty simple to compare the number 1519.03 (which represents King Tut's DNA as SOUTHERN AFRICAN) the CLOSEST match, to the number 5.33 (which represents NORTHWEST EUROPEAN) ...the _LOWEST_ match ...well actually MESOPOTAMIAN is actually the only match even lower. The current caucasian North African population is a 6.55 match and the current Arabian population is a 10.91 match.
Now when you compare those low numbers to the current BLACK "African Great Lakes" population which is at 1328.01 and the current BLACK "TropicalWest African" population which is at 314.00 or the current BLACK "Southern African" population which is the CLOSEST match at 1519.03 you'll realize how utterly preposterous and PATHETIC it is that those who are in the category of the most DISTANT match are trying so very hard to LIE & DENY. (TYPICAL!!)
(On future videos we shall delve much deeper into this ongoing conspiracy to LIE & DENY regarding the TRUTH about black Egypt and the many cover-ups that Zahi Hawass has been involved in.) The evidence is rock solid and ...as usual shall include incontrovertible evidence and FACTS that are easily verifiable and beyond refute.)

The link below will take you directly to the actual DNA test results of King Tut, Amenhotep III and others in the royal family.
http://dnatribes.com/dnatribes-digest-2012-01-01.pdf
Interesting how the Eurocentrists collaborate and conspire to postulate false and even downright preposterous evidence but they consistently fail to produce any concrete FACTS or EVIDENCE for their false claims. Although Zahi Hawass the EX Egyptologist in charge of Egypt's antiquities was and is a whore who would and has sold out to the highest bidder especially if they are a party to his ministry of misinformation.
Now regarding this King Tut is Western European nonsense, it's interesting that this lie was created by a retired physician who saw a program on television as they were doing the DNA testing, saw a DNA printout hanging on a wall, analyzed THAT only then put out this nonsense that King Tut was European in order to appease the gullible who are so utterly desperate to be that which they quite clearly are not.
It matters not to the desperate that this physicians tactics have been refuted or that members of the actual DNA team who tested the mummies stated that his findings are "impossible". It matters NOT. The willfully ignorant and gullible just require ANYTHING at all that they may hang their hats upon to try to validate that which they only wish were true.
On this video we shall present the ACTUAL and FACTUAL DNA test results of King Tut's mummy, his grandfather Akhenaten III and others of the royal family.
Don't be dismayed if you don't quite comprehend what you see. It's pretty simple to compare the number 1519.03 (which represents King Tut's DNA as SOUTHERN AFRICAN) the CLOSEST match, to the number 5.33 (which represents NORTHWEST EUROPEAN) ...the _LOWEST_ match ...well actually MESOPOTAMIAN is actually the only match even lower. The current caucasian North African population is a 6.55 match and the current Arabian population is a 10.91 match.
Now when you compare those low numbers to the current BLACK "African Great Lakes" population which is at 1328.01 and the current BLACK "TropicalWest African" population which is at 314.00 or the current BLACK "Southern African" population which is the CLOSEST match at 1519.03 you'll realize how utterly preposterous and PATHETIC it is that those who are in the category of the most DISTANT match are trying so very hard to LIE & DENY. (TYPICAL!!)
(On future videos we shall delve much deeper into this ongoing conspiracy to LIE & DENY regarding the TRUTH about black Egypt and the many cover-ups that Zahi Hawass has been involved in.) The evidence is rock solid and ...as usual shall include incontrovertible evidence and FACTS that are easily verifiable and beyond refute.)